The American Psychiatric Association (APA) has updated its Privacy Policy and Terms of Use, including with new information specifically addressed to individuals in the European Economic Area. As described in the Privacy Policy and Terms of Use, this website utilizes cookies, including for the purpose of offering an optimal online experience and services tailored to your preferences.

Please read the entire Privacy Policy and Terms of Use. By closing this message, browsing this website, continuing the navigation, or otherwise continuing to use the APA's websites, you confirm that you understand and accept the terms of the Privacy Policy and Terms of Use, including the utilization of cookies.

×
EditorialFull Access

Catatonia and Delirium: A Challenge in General Hospital Psychiatry

Catatonia was historically described by Kahlbaum in 1874 as a disease with a cyclic course of melancholy, mania, stupor, and confusion. Kraepelin later postulated that catatonia was a feature of dementia praecox. Evidence has since shown that catatonia is largely associated with bipolar and depressive disorders (43%–45%) and general medical conditions (25%) (1). In clinical settings, catatonia often goes undetected. For example, it was only formally diagnosed in 1.3% of patients in acute psychiatric settings, while two or more catatonic symptoms were present in 18% of cases (2). This disconnect could be due to heterogeneity of clinical presentations wherein catatonic symptoms often overlap with the motoric symptoms of delirium and/or substance withdrawal.

According to DSM-5, delirium prohibits a formal diagnosis of catatonia due to another medical condition. Because of the overlapping symptoms, many remain convinced that one diagnosis necessarily excludes the other. Most accept that catatonia describes motor symptoms and not a disturbed sensorium.

Francis and Lopez-Canino (3) systematically demonstrated the presence of catatonic symptoms in delirium patients. They proposed that catatonia may account for the motor components of hypoactive delirium. In another exploratory study, catatonia was present in 12.7% (using DSM-5 criteria) to 32% (using the Bush-Francis Catatonia Rating Scale) of subjects with Delirium Rating Scale-Revised-98 positive delirium (4). These authors suggested that the requirement of clear consciousness for a diagnosis of catatonia in medical patients is more hypothetical than clinically useful. They also showed a high association between catatonia symptoms and the hypoactive or mixed type of delirium. Another study found that in some cases of alcohol and sedative-hypnotic withdrawal, patients met criteria for “withdrawal delirium” and “withdrawal catatonia” simultaneously (5).

The debate over whether catatonia and delirium exist on a spectrum has treatment implications, as delirium is often treated with antipsychotics, which increase the risk of malignant catatonia. In contrast, benzodiazepines are often the first line of treatment in catatonia despite potentially worsening some components of delirium. Roy et al. (6) described three such cases in which catatonia symptoms worsened with benzodiazepines and ultimately remitted with memantine, which may hold promise for the treatment of patients with such a degree of symptom overlap.

Perhaps antiquated terms such as “agrypnia excitata” or “excited sleeplessness” are more clinically useful and point toward a distinct subtype than delirium or catatonia in such cases (5). Without nosological accuracy, we may delay effective treatments like benzodiazepines and ECT, thereby decreasing treatment responsiveness by the time ECT is initiated (given the delay in catatonia treatment is associated with less responsiveness to ECT), prolong hospitalizations, and increase mortality (7). Furthermore, if we fail to capture the syndrome we hope to describe, research becomes imprecise. Ultimately, our ability to treat catatonia before it becomes malignant will rely on our ability to detect it even when delirium is evident in clinical settings. These complicated questions affect the prognoses of our patients and are the kinds of challenges that psychiatrists in the general hospital face every day.

Dr. Roy is a fellow in psychosomatic medicine in the Department of Psychiatry, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Mich., and Guest Editor for this issue of the Residents’ Journal.

The author thanks Drs. Stephen Warnick and Katherine Pier for their assistance.

References

1. Geoffrey PA, Rolland B, Cottencin O: Catatonia and alcohol withdrawal: a complex and underestimated syndrome. Alcohol 2012; 47:288–2904 CrossrefGoogle Scholar

2. van der Heijden FM, Tuinier S, Arts NJ, et al: Catatonia: disappeared or under-diagnosed? Psychopathology 2005; 38:3–8 CrossrefGoogle Scholar

3. Francis A, Lopez-Canino A: Delirium with catatonic features: a new subtype? Psychiatric Times 2009; 26(7) Google Scholar

4. Grover S, Ghosh A, Ghormode D: Do patients of delirium have catatonic features? An exploratory study. Psychiatr Clin Neurosci 2014; 68:644–651 CrossrefGoogle Scholar

5. Oldham MA, Desan PH: Alcohol and sedative-hypnotic withdrawal catatonia: two case reports, systematic literature review, and suggestion of a potential relationship with alcohol withdrawal delirium. Psychosom 2016; 57:246–255 CrossrefGoogle Scholar

6. Roy K, Warnick SJ, Balor R: Catatonia-delirium: three cases treated with memantine. Psychosom (in press) Google Scholar

7. Ellul P, Choucha W: Neurobiological approach of catatonia and treatment perspectives. Front Psychiatry 2015; 6:182:1–11 Google Scholar