| Literature DB >> 31014303 |
R David Heekin1, Kalonda Bradshaw2, Chadi A Calarge3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Catatonia is a neuropsychiatric syndrome characterized by diverse psychomotor abnormalities, including motor dysregulation and behavioral and affective disturbances. Once thought to occur primarily in the context of schizophrenia, recent data suggest most cases of catatonia develop in individuals with depressive or bipolar disorders. Moreover, catatonia may ensue in general medical and neurological conditions, as well as due to a variety of pharmaceuticals, drugs of abuse, and toxic agents. At one time considered rare in pediatric patients, evidence now suggests catatonia is both underrecognized and undertreated in this population, where it carries an elevated risk of morbidity and mortality. Here we present the case of a child with steroid-resistant nephrotic syndrome who developed catatonia due to cyclosporine A-related neurotoxicity. CASEEntities:
Keywords: Catatonia; Cyclosporine; Nephrotic syndrome; Neurotoxicity; Propofol
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31014303 PMCID: PMC6480487 DOI: 10.1186/s12888-019-2107-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Psychiatry ISSN: 1471-244X Impact factor: 3.630
Summary of clinical course
| Hospital day | Clinical summary/therapeutic interventions |
|---|---|
| 1 | Patient admitted due to staring, mutism, posturing, insomnia, gait abnormalities, and somatic delusions. Home CsA discontinued due to concern for neurotoxicity. Methylprednisolone 48 mg IV daily substituted for home prednisolone 60 mg PO daily. Empiric acyclovir, vancomycin, and ceftriaxone given for possible meningitis. |
| 3 | Temporary lysis of catatonia achieved with propofol 80 mg IV. Lorazepam challenge test (2 mg IV one-time dose) later resulted in temporary resolution of catatonic symptoms. Lorazepam 2 mg IV TID started. |
| 4 | Due to concern for malignant catatonia, lorazepam increased to 3 mg IV TID with resolution of autonomic instability. |
| 5 | Mycophenolate mofetil 500 mg IV BID started as alternative to home CsA for steroid-resistant nephrotic syndrome. |
| 10 | Lorazepam 3 mg IV TID switched to 3 mg PO TID. |
| 12 | Mycophenolate mofetil 500 mg IV BID switched to 750 mg PO BID. |
| 14 | Methylprednisolone decreased to 30 mg IV daily. |
| 15 | Mycophenolate mofetil increased to 1000 mg PO BID. |
| 18 | Lorazepam increased to 3.75 mg PO TID. Methylprednisolone decreased to 20 mg IV daily. |
| 20 | Methylprednisolone 20 mg IV daily switched to prednisone 25 mg PO daily. Mycophenolate mofetil held due to continued altered mental status. |
| 24 | Lorazepam decreased to 3 mg PO TID due to concern for psychomotor slowing and sedation. |
| 25 | Mycophenolate mofetil 1000 mg PO BID restarted due to no improvement in mental status while off this medication. |
| 28 | Quetiapine 12.5 mg PO QHS started as adjunctive treatment for catatonia and psychosis. Quetiapine titrated to 25 mg QAM + 50 mg QHS over the following 7 days. |
| 36 | Quetiapine switched to quetiapine XR 100 mg PO QHS. Quetiapine XR titrated to 300 mg PO QHS over the following 12 days. |
| 39 | Patient was increasingly interactive and no longer exhibited somatic delusions or sensory misperceptions. Psychotropic meds were lorazepam 3 mg PO TID and quetiapine XR 150 mg PO QHS. |
| 68 | Catatonic symptoms noted to have resolved. Parents believed patient was at his mental status baseline. Psychotropic meds were lorazepam 3 mg PO TID and quetiapine XR 300 mg QHS. |
| 78 | Patient was discharged home on psychotropic meds lorazepam 3 mg PO TID and quetiapine XR 250 mg PO QHS (both tapered and discontinued over the following 3 months). |
BID: 2 times per day, CsA: cyclosporine A, IV: intravenous, PO: oral, QAM: every morning, QHS: every night, TID: 3 times per day, XR: extended release
Reported cases of CsA-related neurotoxicity (excluding PRES) in patients with SRNS
| Reference | Age (years)/ Gender | Renal diagnosis | CsA plasma level at time of episode (ng/mL) | Other medications at time of episode | Neurologic signs/symptoms | EEG findings | CT/MRI findings |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| [ | 4/F | SRNS MesPGN | 132 | Not reported | Altered conciousness, seizures, cortical blindness | n/a | MRI: Increased T2 intensity and restricted diffusion on DWI/ADC in P, O, W, G |
| [ | 11/M | SRNS FSGS | 141 | Not reported | Altered conciousness, seizures | n/a | MRI: Increased T2 intensity and restricted diffusion on DWI/ADC in P, Fr, W |
| [ | 15/F | SRNS IgA nephropathy | 263 | Not reported | Altered conciousness, seizures | n/a | CT: hypodense zones in P, O |
| [ | 6.5/F | SRNS MCD | 172 | Prednisolone (35 mg/day) Sodium valproate (1 mg/kg IV per hour) Phenobarbital (10 mg/kg IV) | Headache, confusion, hallucinations, seizures, coma | Focus of slow paroxysmal activity in posterior right leads | CT: normal MRI: contrast enhancement in corticosubcortical areas of P and Fr bilaterally (resolved at 3 month comparison study) |
| [ | 12/F | SRNS MesPGN | 203 | Prednisolone (60 mg every other day) | Headache, confusion, seizures, status epilepticus | Slow activity (consistent with therapeutic coma) with left occipital spikes | CT: normal MRI: Increased T2 intensity in cortex and cortico-subcortical junction of medial left P and bilateral Fr |
| [ | 10/M | SRNS FSGS | 85.55 | Prednisone (2 mg/mg/day) | Anxiety, tremor, headache, neck pain | Normal | CT: “small widening sulcus on brain surface” |
CsA: cyclosporine A, PRES: posterior reversible encephalopathy syndrome, SRNS: steroid-resistant nephrotic syndrome, EEG: electroencephalogram, CT: comptuted tomography, MRI: magnetic resonance imaging, MesPGN: mesangial proliferative glomerulonephritis, T2: T2-weighted imaging, DWI: diffusion-weighted imaging, ADC: apparent diffusion coefficient mapping, P: parietal region, O: occipital region, W: white matter, G: gray matter, FSGS: focal segmental glomerulosclerosis, Fr: frontal region, MCD: minimal change disease, IV: intravenous