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Catatonic disorders Health Article
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DefinitionCatatonic disorders are a group of symptoms characterized by disturbances in motor (muscular movement) behavior that may have either a psychological or a physiological basis. The best-known of these symptoms is immobility, which is a rigid positioning of the body held for a considerable length of time. Patients diagnosed with a catatonic disorder may maintain their body position for hours, days, weeks or even months at a time. Alternately, catatonic symptoms may look like agitated, purposeless movements that are seemingly unrelated to the person's environment. The condition itself is called catatonia. A less extreme symptom of catatonic disorder is slowed-down motor activity. Often, the body position or posture of a catatonic person is unusual or inappropriate; in addition, he or she may hold a position if placed in it by someone else. Types of catatonic disorderCATATONIC SCHIZOPHRENIA.Schizophreniais a severe, usually life-long mental illness that affects every aspect of human functioning. Thinking, feeling, and behavior are all affected by the disorder; and the person with schizophrenia usually has difficulties in interpersonal relationships as well as in obtaining and keeping meaningful employment. The catatonic subtype of schizophrenia is, fortunately, rare today in North America and Europe. It is characterized by severe disturbances in motor behavior. Individuals with catatonic schizophrenia often show extreme immobility. They may stay in the same position for hours, days, weeks, or longer. The position they assume may be unusual and appear uncomfortable to the observer; for example, the person may stand on one leg like a stork, or hold one arm outstretched for a long time. If an observer moves a hand or limb of the catatonic person's body, he or she may maintain the new Catatonic symptoms were first described by the psychiatristKarl Ludwig Kahlbaum in 1874. Kahlbaum described catatonia as a disorder characterized by unusual motor symptoms. His description of individuals with catatonic behaviors remains accurate to this day. Kaulbaum carefully documented the symptoms and the course of the illness, providing a natural history of this unusual disorder. DEPRESSION WITH CATATONIC FEATURES.People who are severely depressed may show disturbances of motor behavior resembling those of patients diagnosed with catatonic schizophrenia. These depressed persons may remain virtually motionless, or move around in an extremely vigorous but apparently random fashion. Extreme negativism, elective mutism (choosing not to speak), peculiar movements, and imitating someone else's words or phrases (echolalia) or movements (echopraxia) may also be part of the symptomatic picture. These behaviors may require caregivers to supervise the patient, to insure that he or she does not hurt him- or herself or others. Catatonic behaviors may also occur in persons with other mood disorders. Persons experiencing manic or mixed mood states (a simultaneous combination of manic and depressive symptoms) may at times exhibit either the immobility or agitated random activity seen in catatonia. A severely depressed person may experience intense emotional pain from simply moving a finger. Even getting up out of a chair can be a painful chore that may take hours for the severely depressed individual. As the depression begins to lift, the catatonic symptoms diminish. CATATONIC DISORDER DUE TO A GENERAL MEDICAL CONDITION.Persons with catatonic disorder due to a medical condition show symptoms similar to those of catatonic schizophrenia and catatonic depression, except that the cause is believed to be physiological. Such neurological diseases as encephalitis may cause catatonic symptoms that can be temporary or lasting. Psychiatric symptoms caused by physiological illnesses can appear early in the course of an illness. For this reason, it is important to consider possible physical causes when catatonic symptoms appear. Persons with catatonic symptoms of physical origin generally show |
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