AI Article Synopsis

  • Catatonia is a syndrome characterized by motor dysregulation, associated with various psychiatric and neurological conditions, and can be classified into retarded and excited types.
  • A 64-year-old woman experienced symptoms like insomnia and combativeness after a mild injury, leading to a diagnosis of excited-type catatonia.
  • The case highlights the potential for catatonia to develop after minor trauma, the risk of misdiagnosis in clinical settings, and the importance of careful long-term treatment with lorazepam.

Article Abstract

Catatonia is a syndrome of motor dysregulation, usually associated with psychiatric, neurological, systemic and drug-related diseases. Retarded and excited types exist, both of which often go unrecognised in clinical practice. We describe a 64-year-old woman who gradually developed insomnia, started communicating less, complained of feeling restless and ended up injuring relatives. Initiation of symptoms followed a fibula fracture. The patient was diagnosed with excited-type catatonia with prominent combativeness because of minor trauma and rapidly recovered after lorazepam treatment instatement. Our case demonstrates that catatonia can follow minor traumatic injury and how excited-type catatonic features may go unrecognised in general practitioner and specialist settings. Moreover, we show that catatonia may be recurrent, necessitating long-term treatment and very gradual lorazepam tapering.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3703089PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/bcr-2012-008217DOI Listing

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