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Acute Stress Induced Catatonic Psychosis in an Adolescent: A Case Report

IntroductionChildhood maltreatment(CM) can precipitate a range of psychiatric disorders in individuals. Some research show that CM rates are as high as 85% in schizophrenia spectrum disorders (Larsson et al. 2013). This case report explores an instance of acute catatonic psychosis in an adolescent f...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:European psychiatry 2024-08, Vol.67 (S1), p.S728-S729
Main Author: E Yerlikaya Oral
Format: Article
Language:English
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Summary:IntroductionChildhood maltreatment(CM) can precipitate a range of psychiatric disorders in individuals. Some research show that CM rates are as high as 85% in schizophrenia spectrum disorders (Larsson et al. 2013). This case report explores an instance of acute catatonic psychosis in an adolescent following a significant episode of physical and emotional abuse.ObjectivesThe aim is to elucidate the clinical presentation, diagnosis, and treatment of trauma-induced acute catatonic psychosis in an adolescent. The report seeks to emphasize the potential link between acute trauma and severe psychiatric disorders in young individuals.MethodsA thorough review of the patient’s clinical records was undertaken, focusing on psychiatric history, symptoms, treatment trials and responses. In parallel, an extensive literature review was conducted to understand the current knowledge on the association between acute traumatic stress and acute psychosis with catatonia.ResultsThe patient, a 16-year-old female, presented with severe symptoms of catatonia and psychosis including mutism, posturing, stupor, negativism, auditory hallucinations and persecutory delusions, in addition; eating refusal, urinary and fecal incontinence. Symptoms started immediately following physical and emotional abuse that occurred 10 days ago. She was hitted, insulted and detained for 2 days by her parent’s friends. Abuse reported to social services and judicial authorities. All laboratory and neurologic examinations performed to exclude an organic pathology. No pathologic results founded. Olanzapine 5 mg/day and lorazepam 0.5 mg/day started and titrated to 30 mg/day and 3.75 mg/day doses. Biperiden 4 mg/day started due to extrapyramidal side effects. A significant improvement observed about her catatonic and positive psychotic symptoms but she still had acute stress disorder symptoms. Trauma-focused cognitive-behavioral therapy added to her treatment. Family-based interventions examined for CM. She discharged in full remission after eight weeks of hospital stay. Lorazepam dose reduced and stopped before discharge.ConclusionsNeurobiological models are trying to enlight the association between experiencing highly stressful or traumatic events, such as child abuse, may impact on later expression of psychotic disorders by increasing stress sensitivity to later adversity (Fares-Otero et al. 2023). This case underscores the potential of acute traumatic stress to precipitate severe psychiatric disorders, in
ISSN:0924-9338
1778-3585
DOI:10.1192/j.eurpsy.2024.1515