| Literature DB >> 31571888 |
Judith H Miles1,2, Nicole Takahashi2, Julie Muckerman2, Kerri P Nowell2,3, Muaid Ithman4.
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: The goal is to expand our knowledge of catatonia occurring in adolescents and young adults with Down syndrome (DS) by describing the first prospective, consecutive, well-characterized cohort of seven young people with DS diagnosed with catatonia and treated between 2013 and 2018, and to assess each patient's treatment responses. Longitudinal assessment of each patient's response to treatment is intended to provide clinicians and psychiatrists a firm foundation from which assess treatment efficacy. STUDYEntities:
Keywords: Bush-Francis Catatonia Rating Scale; Trisomy 21; benzodiazepines; dextromethorphan/quinidine; electroconvulsive therapy; lorazepam
Year: 2019 PMID: 31571888 PMCID: PMC6759875 DOI: 10.2147/NDT.S210613
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Neuropsychiatr Dis Treat ISSN: 1176-6328 Impact factor: 2.570
Symptoms of catatonia in DS using the Bush-Francis Catatonia Rating Scale (BFCRS)
Notes: = symptom reported or observed at first visit. = symptom reported or observed in follow-up. *Wachtel et al, 2019.34
Demographic, genetic, medical and psychiatric features in seven cases of DS and catatonia
| 1. BK | 2. MS | 3. BC | 4. PL | 5. JT | 6. CN | 7. BI | Composite | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Gender | M | F | F | F | F | F | F | 1M:6F |
| Age at diagnosis (yrs) | 19 | 19 | 33 | 25 | 26 | 19 | 25 | 19–33 yrs |
| Age- symptom onset (yrs) | 18 | 13 | 25 | 15–19 | 26 | 17 | 19 | 13 −25 yrs |
| Diagnosis delay | 9 mo | 6 yrs | 8 yrs | 10 years | 1 mo | 2 yrs | 6 yrs | 1mo - 10 yrs |
| Follow up period | 6 yrs | 5.2 yrs | 5 yrs | 3.5 yrs | 3.2 yrs | 2.8 yrs | 2.7 yrs | 2.7 −6 yrs |
| Current functioning(% baseline) | 90% | 80% | 90% | 95% | (100%)b | 90% | 85% | 80%-100% |
| Cytogenetic diagnosis | T21 | T21 | T21 | T21 | T21 | T21 mosaic | T21 | 6=T21 1=mosaic |
| Premorbid Cognitive Testing | Moderate ID | FSIQ =29 | – | – | – | – | – | – |
| Premorbid adaptive functioning | High | Low | Medium | High | Medium | Low to Medium | High | – |
| Premorbid reading level | 7th grade | none | 4th grade | 5th grade | 5th grade | 2nd grade | 7th grade | 0–7th grade |
| Potential precipitating stressors | None | Aggressive classmates | Death of father | Leaving HS | None | Father ill | Parent divorce | 71% |
| Congenital heart disease | - | PDA – spontaneous closure | ASD secundum | ASD - spontaneous closure | ASD, PDA- spontaneous closure | AV canal surgery – 6 mo | - | 71% |
| Ophthalmic disorders; visual impairment | myopia, esotropia | myopia, astigmatism | esotropia, s/p surgery | astigmatism | myopia, esotropia | esotropia, s/p surgery | esotropia s/p surgery | 100% |
| Allergies | Hay fever | Hay fever | None | Hay fever | None | None | Hay fever | 57% |
| Medical history - other | Sleep apneaa | – | Sleep apneaa Osteopenia (DEXA) | Sleep apneaa Cataplexy* | Morbid obesity | Apraxia, Aphasia | – | – |
| Psychiatric history | None | Autism | None | None | None | None | None | 14% |
| Family history | Anxiety (F) hypo-thyroid (F) | Mild ASD (Brother) | Hemochrom-atosis (M) | Anxiety (M) | Depression, pancreatitis, Panic (M) | Anxiety (M), Nephro- pathy (F) | Depression (M) | – |
Notes: aDiagnosed during regression evaluation. bDeceased. See Table 4 for autoimmune disorders.
Autoimmune diagnoses and testing in seven case of DS and catatonia
Notes: aDiagnosed during regression evaluation. bUnclear autoimmune etiology.
Abbreviation: , Autoimmune diagnoses and laboratory indicators.
Medical and neurologic features and test results in seven case of DS and catatonia
Notes: aDiagnosed during regression evaluation. bReported in catatonia affecting ASD (Wachtel et al 2019).34
Abbreviations: nd, not done; CVT, cerebral venous thrombosis; OSA, Obstructive Sleep Apnea; , positive symptom or out of range laboratory.
Catatonia treatments and results in seven case of DS and catatonia
| Mechanism | Treatments | 1. BK | 2. MS | 3. BC | 4. PL | 5. JT | 6. CN | 7. BI |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| GABA Agonists | Positive – 4 | Positive −2 | Positive - 4 | Positive - 4 | Positive −3 | Positive −2 | Positive −2 | |
| 75% initially, | DC’d - parent concerns | 50% | 50% | 100% | 60% & then recurrence | 70% Maintained after ECT | ||
| 90% for 2 yrs, | 90% | >90% | >95% | na | 90% | 90% | ||
| 1 course | 1 course plus maintenance ECT | 3 courses | 1 course | – | 3 courses plus maintenance ECT | 1 course plus maintenance ECT | ||
| Glutamate Antagonist | Unclear. Short course 3 years after ECT | Maintained after ECT | Maintained after ECT | Maintained after ECT | – | With Lorazepam & ECT | Improved & maintained after ECT | |
| DC’d - efficacy | DC’d - efficacy | – | – | DC’d -irritability | – | – | ||
| Anti-inflammatory | DC’d – lethargy | DC’d – efficacy | DC’d – efficacy | – | DC -possible liver risk | – | – | |
| Multiple mechanisms | Possibly improved | – | DC’d -efficacy | – | – | – | – | |
| Medications prior to diagnosis that did not reduce symptoms | divalproex sodium, sertraline | aripiprazole, sertraline, fluoxetine | sertraline | none | none | SSRI | SSRIs x3, bupropion HCl, diazepam, lorazepam 0.5 mg | |
Note: Likert scale: 1=none, 2=some, 3= good, 4= very good, 5=excellent. Per Parent & Physician; See Figure 1 for CIS longitudinal course examples.
Figure 1Longitudinal progress measured by parent reports using the Catatonia Impact Scale (CIS) and BFCRS. (A) Case 4. PL. From 7/31/15 to 2/10/19. (B) Case 2. CN. From 4/6/16 to 2/7/19.