| Literature DB >> 27738781 |
Abstract
It was observed nearly 200 years ago that mothers with puerperal psychosis may recover, then relapse, sometimes repeatedly. This phenomenon seems to be better recognized in the American and French literature, where it has been reported in a large minority, or even majority, of cases. It offers an opportunity to study the pathogenesis of psychosis.Entities:
Keywords: Early postpartum trigger; Multiple relapses; Prepartum psychosis
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27738781 PMCID: PMC5237437 DOI: 10.1007/s00737-016-0682-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Arch Womens Ment Health ISSN: 1434-1816 Impact factor: 3.633
Reports of relapses by generation
| Years | Episodes with relapses | Non-organic postpartum psychoses | Percentage |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1801–1825 | 2 | 43 | 5 |
| 1826–1850 | 3 | 73 | 4 |
| 1851–1875 | 14 | 135 | 10 |
| 1876–1900 | 10 | 305 | 3 |
| 1901–1925 | 23 | 391 | 6 |
| 1926–1950 | 38 | 522 | 7 |
| 1951–1975 | 73 | 408 | 18 |
| 1976–present | 25 | 245 | 10 |
| Total | 188 | 2122 | 8 |
Reports of relapses by language group
| Language | Cases with relapses | Non-organic postpartum psychoses | Percentage |
|---|---|---|---|
| French | 85 | 715 | 12 |
| American | 26 | 224 | 12 |
| Italian | 18 | 198 | 9 |
| Other | 20 | 214 | 9 |
| German | 26 | 472 | 6 |
| British commonwealth | 8 | 211 | 4 |
| Dutch | 3 | 88 | 3 |
Relapse of postpartum psychosis: series published by Cain et al. 1959
| Clinical details | Onset of psychosis | Recovery | Relapse |
|---|---|---|---|
| Case 2: early onset of “hallucinatory delirium” with logorrhoea and ideas of her own death and that of her mother | Day 10 | After 5 ECT | Day 25 requiring five more ECT |
| Case 4: early onset of agitation with confusion and disorientation. Alternating manic excitation and anxious indifference | Day 3 | With ECT | The same symptoms requiring more ECT |
| Case 7: early onset of excitement with incoherence, agitation, delusions of guilt and erotomania. Alternating excitement and stuporose confusion | Day 3 | With ECT | Relapse, no details |
| Case 8: confusion and incoherence, then melancholic stupor with euphoria, flight of ideas and logorrhoea | Day 3 | With ECT | Relapse after a week, recovery, 2nd relapse 2 weeks later |
| Case 12: agitation, logorrhoea, incoherence, ideas of persecution by her husband, and morbid jealousy | One month after the birth | With ECT | Three relapses |
| Case 13: psychosis with polymorphic delusions and extreme excitement | Some days after the birth | Rapid response to ECT | Relapse, no details |
| Case 15: manic excitement with mental confusion | One week after the birth | After nine ECT | Relapse a week later, requiring more ECT |
| Case 16: stupor, with mutism, food refusal, agitation with auto-accusation, cursing and hating everyone, violence | Day 19 | With ECT | One relapse, no details |
Relapse of puerperal psychosis; series published by Delay et al. 1948
| Details of case | Course |
|---|---|
| Case 1: on day 9, onset of a variable polymorphic state with alternation of depression and poorly systematized delusions of persecution. | Recovery after 20 ECT, relapse with mutism, catatonia, delusions and excitement, requiring more ECT, followed by three more relapses at intervals of 2 months and 3 weeks, requiring further treatment by insulin comas and ECT. |
| Case 4: on day 8, she was hospitalized with depression and ideas of cancer; she was disorientated and could hear people speaking to her and the cries of her mother suffering torture. Excitement alternated with stupor and catalepsy. | After nine ECT, her mind cleared. On day 43, her menses appeared, and on day 48, she relapsed and required 15 more ECT. |
| Case 5: onset 1 month after the birth: she misidentified people and had hallucinations of people talking all the time. Hospitalized over 4 months later, she was disorientated and had visual and auditory hallucinations. She became excited and, 6 months after the birth, received ECT. | She improved within 2 weeks but relapsed a few days later. ECT was resumed. A state of excitement continued with persecutory ideas, and she was treated with insulin comas. |
| Case 7: on day 9, she became excited—laughing, crying and talking incoherently. On day 19, she was hospitalized—disinhibited, euphoric, shouting and dancing. | With 8 ECT, she improved. About a week later, she relapsed, recovered and was discharged 5 months after the birth. |
| Case 9: 2 months after the birth, she became disturbed and, after 4 months, was admitted to hospital with excitement, fugues, singing, constant joking, flight of ideas and complete insomnia. | Two weeks later, after the reappearance of her menses, she calmed down. A month later, she relapsed. After ECT, she was discharged 8 months after the birth. |
| Case 11: on day 6, she began to say that her husband wanted to get rid of her; she was being poisoned and persecuted by an unknown group. She was sleepless and refused food. | Within a month, after five ECT, she improved. In the 6th week, her menses appeared, and she relapsed with delusional depression, requiring another five ECT. |
| Case 12: on day 10, she became manic with flight of ideas, confusion, ideas of persecution and auditory hallucinations. | At 3 weeks, she improved. In the 2nd month, she relapsed, with confusion and food refusal. With 12 ECT, she improved, but, at 3 months, relapsed again. With more ECT, she improved but relapsed 8 months after the birth. |
| Case 15: on day 7, she became manic, with shouting, singing, familiarity and exuberance. | Treated with ECT, she improved. Her menses returned at 2 months, preceded by a relapse. She had several phases of excitation. She recovered 9 months after the birth. |
| Case 16: after a birth complicated by a fever of 40°, she became agitated, then sank into stupor, mutism and prostration. She claimed that her own child was dead, and this one was not hers. | Treated with ECT, she lost her delusions. Five months after the birth her menses appeared, with a relapse of melancholic delusions and food refusal. She recovered with further ECT. |
| Case 20: within a week of the birth, she became depressed with delusions of guilt. | Treated with ECT, she improved, but a month later relapsed with excitation. After 25 insulin comas, she recovered. |