| Literature DB >> 30073108 |
Samantha Zwiebel1, Alejandro G Villasante-Tejanos2, Jose de Leon1,3,4,5.
Abstract
Kahlbaum first described catatonia; later Kraepelin, Gjessing, and Leonhard each defined periodic catatonia differently. A 48-year-old female with catatonia, whose grandmother probably died from it, was prospectively followed for >4 years in a US psychiatric state hospital. Through 4 catatonic episodes (one lasting 17 months) there were menstrual exacerbations of catatonia and increases in 4 biological variables: (1) creatine kinase (CK) up to 4,920 U/L, (2) lactate dehydrogenase (LDH) up to 424 U/L, (3) late afternoon cortisol levels up to 28.0 mcg/dL, and (4) white blood cell (WBC) counts up to 24,200/mm3 with neutrophilia without infections. Records from 17 prior admissions documented elevations of WBC and LDH and included an abnormal dexamethasone suppression test (DST) which normalized with electroconvulsive therapy. Two later admissions showed CK and WBC elevations. We propose that these abnormalities reflect different aspects of catatonic biology: (1) the serum CK, the severity of muscle damage probably exacerbated by the menses; (2) the hypercortisolemia, the associated fear; (3) the leukocytosis with neutrophilia, the hypercortisolemia; and (4) the LDH elevations, which appear to be influenced by other biological abnormalities. Twentieth-century literature was reviewed for (1) menstrual exacerbations of catatonia, (2) biological abnormalities related to periodic catatonia, and (3) familial periodic catatonia.Entities:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30073108 PMCID: PMC6057322 DOI: 10.1155/2018/4264763
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Case Rep Psychiatry ISSN: 2090-6838
Adrenal abnormalities in 8 published patients with periodic catatonia1.
| First author | Country | Case | Age | Retrospective | Endocrine measure |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Ashby [ | England | 38♀ | Schizophrenia | Patient improved with ECT but urinary 17-ketosteroids unchanged | |
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| Gornall [ | Canada | 2 | 36♂ | Schizophrenia | ↓ urinary 17-ketosteroids during excited phase, normal in interval |
| 3 | 33♀ | Schizophrenia | ↑ urinary steroids during stupor phase, normal in interval | ||
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| Cookson [ | Canada | 22♀ | Schizophrenia | No relationship between ↑urinary 17-ketosteroids and stupor | |
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| Vesterggard [ | USA | 1 | 47♂ | Schizophrenia | ↓ urinary steroids during stupor |
| 2 | 40♂ | Schizophrenia | ↑ urinary steroids during stupor | ||
| 3 | 29♂ | Schizophrenia | No relationship between urinary steroids and stupor | ||
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| McCall [ | USA | 60♂ | Idiopathic | Lack of DST suppression during stupor, normalized with recovery | |
1Eight patients were excluded as they did not have clearly distinct episodes of periodic catatonia, including two patients described by Gunne and Gemzell [35] and six patients (Cases 1, 2, 3, 4, 9, and 10) described by Hatotani et al. [36]. Case 1 by Gornall et al. [31] and Cases 5, 6, 7, and 8 by Hatotani et al. [36] are not included among the 16 patients with measures of adrenal function, due to lack of these measures.
2Retrospective DSM-5 diagnoses by agreement between two of the authors.
3There is no family history of catatonia but the patient's symptoms appeared similar to our patient. As a matter of fact, the patient had some “preoccupation with guilt and punishment” as did our patient.
Biological variables during and between four catatonic episodes at the psychiatric state hospital (admission 18).
| Episode | Trigger | Duration | Symptoms | Hypercortisolemia | Muscle Enzymes | ↑ Platelets2 (peak) | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Excitement | Stupor | ↑ Cortisol1 | ↑ WBC2 | ↑ CK3 | ↑ LDH3 | ||||
| First | Menses | 10 days | Yes | Yes | - | Yes | Yes | No | Yes |
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| Between first and second | 147 days | No | No | - | - | - | - | - | |
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| Second | Menses & benzo stop | 509 days | Yes | Yes | Intermittent | Persistent | Yes | Yes | Yes |
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| Between second and third | 364 days | No | No | No | Initially4 | No | No | Initially5 | |
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| Third | Menses & ECT delay | 14 days | Yes | No | No | Yes | No | No | Initially6 |
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| Between third and fourth | 281 days | No | No | - | - | - | - | - | |
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| Fourth | Benzo stop | 4 days | Yes | No | - | - | - | - | - |
Benzo: benzodiazepines; CK: creatine kinase; ECT: electroconvulsive therapy; LDH: lactate dehydrogenase; WBC: white blood cell count.
1Units mcg/dL
2Unit count in mm3
3Units U/L
4WBC values were abnormal until 151 days after the end of the second catatonic episode.
5Platelet count was abnormal until 187 days after the end of the second catatonic episode.
6Platelet count was abnormal on day 5 of the third catatonic episode but after day 7 it became normal.