| Literature DB >> 33681793 |
Laura Perju-Dumbrava1, Peter Kempster1,2.
Abstract
The observability of movement gives it advantages when trying to draw connections between brain and mind. Disturbed motor function pervades schizophrenia, though it is difficult now to subtract the effects of antipsychotic treatment. There is evidence from patients never exposed to these drugs that dyskinesia and even parkinsonism are to some degree innate to schizophrenia. Tardive dyskinesia and drug-induced parkinsonism are the most common movement disorders encountered in psychiatric practice. While D2 dopamine receptor blockade is a causative factor, both conditions defy straightforward neurochemical explanation. Balanced against the need to manage schizophrenic symptoms, neither prevention nor treatment is easy. Of all disorders classified as psychiatric, catatonia sits closest to organic neurology on the neuropsychiatric spectrum. Not only does it occur in the setting of unequivocally organic cerebral disease, but the alterations of consciousness it produces have 'organic' qualities even when the cause is psychiatric. No longer considered a subtype of schizophrenia, catatonia is defined by syndromic features based on motor phenomenology. Both severe depression and obsessive-compulsive disorder may be associated with 'soft' extrapyramidal signs that resemble parkinsonian bradykinesia. As functional neuroimaging studies suggest, movement and psychiatric disorders involve the same network connections between the basal ganglia and the cerebral cortex. © Author(s) (or their employer(s)) 2020. Re-use permitted under CC BY-NC. No commercial re-use. See rights and permissions. Published by BMJ.Entities:
Keywords: movement disorders; psychiatry; schizophrenia
Year: 2020 PMID: 33681793 PMCID: PMC7871724 DOI: 10.1136/bmjno-2020-000057
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMJ Neurol Open ISSN: 2632-6140
Figure 1A group of schizophrenic men in manneristic poses, from Kraepelin’s textbook.2 The text states: ‘They were put without difficulty in the peculiar positions, and kept them, some with a sly laugh, others with rigid seriousness’.
Clinical features of catatonia
| Clinical feature | Phenomenology | DSM 5 | Bush-Francis |
| Catalepsy | Passive induction of postures held against gravity | · | · |
| Posturing | Spontaneous postures maintained against gravity | · | |
| Waxy flexibility | Slight, even resistance to passive movement | · | · |
| Stupor | Hypoactivity, minimal response to stimuli | · | · |
| Agitation/excitement | Hyperactivity, non-purposeful and not influenced by external stimuli | · | · |
| Mutism | No or minimal verbal response | · | · |
| Negativism | Resistance to instructions without obvious motive; tendency to contrary responses | · | · |
| Mannerisms | Odd, exaggerated caricatures of purposeful movement; abnormality inherent in act itself | · | · |
| Stereotypies | Repetitive, non-goal directed movements; abnormality not inherent in act but in its frequency | · | · |
| Grimacing | Maintained odd facial expressions | · | · |
| Echolalia | Repeating of words spoken by an examiner | · | · |
| Echopraxia | Mimicking of movements made by an examiner | · | |
| Staring | Fixed gaze, reduced environmental scanning, decreased blinking | · | |
| Verbigeration | Meaningless repetition of words and phrases | · | |
| Withdrawal | Refusal to eat, drink and make eye contact | · | |
| Impulsivity | Inappropriate behaviour without provocation | · | |
| Automatic obedience | Exaggerated cooperation with an examiner’s instructions | · | |
| Mitgehen (facilitatory paratonia) | Patient allows an examiner to induce a change in limb position with only light pressure, despite instruction to resist | · | |
| Gegenhalten | Patient resists passive movement of a limb to a new position | · | |
| Rigidity | Closely related to G | · | |
| Ambitendency | Indecisive, hesitant patterns of movement | · | |
| Perseveration | Of speech or actions | · | |
| Combativeness | Undirected and apparently without motivation | · | |
| Grasp reflex | Resembles the palmar grasp reflex of neurological disease states | · | |
| Autonomic abnormality | Cardiovascular, respiratory or thermoregulatory | · |
Three or more of the 12 features listed as Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, 5th edition (DSM-5) criteria are required for a diagnosis of catatonia. The Bush-Francis Catatonia Rating Scale57 comprises 23 items, though posturing and muscle tone features show some overlap.