| Literature DB >> 34942409 |
Jack R Foucher1, Ludovic C Jeanjean2, Clément C de Billy2, Bruno Pfuhlmann3, Julie M E Clauss4, Alexandre Obrecht2, Olivier Mainberger2, Remi Vernet5, Hippolyte Arcay6, Benoit Schorr7, Sébastien Weibel7, Sebastian Walther8, Peter N van Harten9, John L Waddington10, Manuel J Cuesta11, Victor Peralta12, Lucile Dupin13, Fabio Sambataro14, Manuel Morrens15, Katharina M Kubera16, Lydia E Pieters9, Katharina Stegmayer8, Werner Strik8, R Christian Wolf16, Burkhard E Jabs3, Miriam Ams17, Claudio Garcia18, Markus Hanke19, Julien Elowe20, Andreas Bartsch21, Fabrice Berna22, Dusan Hirjak17.
Abstract
Current classification systems use the terms "catatonia" and "psychomotor phenomena" as mere a-theoretical descriptors, forgetting about their theoretical embedment. This was the source of misunderstandings among clinicians and researchers of the European collaboration on movement and sensorimotor/psychomotor functioning in schizophrenia and other psychoses or ECSP. Here, we review the different perspectives, their historical roots and highlight discrepancies. In 1844, Wilhelm Griesinger coined the term "psychic-motor" to name the physiological process accounting for volition. While deriving from this idea, the term "psychomotor" actually refers to systems that receive miscellaneous intrapsychic inputs, convert them into coherent behavioral outputs send to the motor systems. More recently, the sensorimotor approach has drawn on neuroscience to redefine the motor signs and symptoms observed in psychoses. In 1874, Karl Kahlbaum conceived catatonia as a brain disease emphasizing its somatic - particularly motor - features. In conceptualizing dementia praecox Emil Kraepelin rephrased catatonic phenomena in purely mental terms, putting aside motor signs which could not be explained in this way. Conversely, the Wernicke-Kleist-Leonhard school pursued Kahlbaum's neuropsychiatric approach and described many new psychomotor signs, e.g. parakinesias, Gegenhalten. They distinguished 8 psychomotor phenotypes of which only 7 are catatonias. These barely overlap with consensus classifications, raising the risk of misunderstanding. Although coming from different traditions, the authors agreed that their differences could be a source of mutual enrichment, but that an important effort of conceptual clarification remained to be made. This narrative review is a first step in this direction.Entities:
Keywords: Psychomotor; catatonia; history; incommensurability; neuropsychiatry; psychosis; sensorimotor
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34942409 DOI: 10.1016/j.euroneuro.2021.11.008
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Eur Neuropsychopharmacol ISSN: 0924-977X Impact factor: 4.600