Psychosis in Children and Adolescents

Psychosis in Children and Adolescents

Psychosis in Children and Adolescents

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Overview & Epidemiology - Spotting Shadows Early

Psychosis in C&A: severe mental disorders, reality distortion. Rare; devastating developmental impact.

  • Epidemiology:
    • Childhood-Onset Schizophrenia (COS; <13 yrs): Extremely rare (~1/30,000).
    • Adolescent-Onset (AOS; 13-18 yrs): Incidence ↑ sharply; overall psychosis prevalence ~0.5-1%.
  • Impact: Profound on development; poorer prognosis with very early onset. High comorbidity.
  • Red Flags (C&A vs. Adults):
    • Onset: Often insidious.
    • Hallucinations: Visual/tactile more common initially; simpler content.
    • Delusions: Less complex, concrete, often child-themed.
    • Thought/Speech: Disorganization harder to discern from immaturity/language issues.
    • Negative Symptoms: Prominent; may mimic depression/developmental issues.
    • Developmental context crucial. Onset of Schizophrenia in Children and Adolescents

⭐ Very early onset schizophrenia (VEOS; onset <13 years) carries a worse prognosis and stronger genetic loading than later-onset forms.

Etiology & Differentials - Roots & Look-Alikes

Etiology:

  • Genetic: Strong heritability; family Hx (psychosis/SCZ); 22q11.2 deletion.
  • Neurobiological: Dopamine (DA) dysregulation; Glutamate, GABA, 5-HT roles; Neurodevelopmental insults (e.g., pruning defects).
  • Environmental: Prenatal (infections), perinatal (hypoxia), childhood trauma, urbanicity.
  • Substance Use: Cannabis (esp. adolescent, high-THC), stimulants.

Pediatric Psychosis: Etiology and Differential Diagnosis

Key Differential Diagnoses:

CategoryExamples
Primary Psychotic DisordersSchizophrenia, Schizoaffective Dis.
Mood Disorders with PsychosisBipolar Dis., MDD with psychotic features
Substance/Medication-InducedCannabis, Amphetamines, Steroids
Due to Another Medical Condition (AMC)Epilepsy, CNS infections, Autoimmune encephalitis, Thyroid dis., Wilson's.
Other PsychiatricSevere OCD, PTSD, ASD, Personality Dis. (Schizotypal, BPD)
Non-PsychiatricDelirium

Clinical Features & Diagnosis - Clues & Confirmation

  • Often insidious onset; look for developmental regression or decline in functioning.

  • Hallucinations: Auditory most common; visual/tactile more frequent than in adults, often simpler.

  • Delusions: Less systematized, more concrete (e.g., persecutory, somatic).

  • Negative symptoms: Social withdrawal, apathy, alogia can be prominent.

  • Mood symptoms (anxiety, depression, irritability) & cognitive deficits common.

  • Thorough history: Child, parents, school; family history of psychosis vital.

  • Developmentally-adapted Mental Status Examination (MSE).

  • Exclude organic causes:

    • Substance use (especially cannabis).
    • Medical: Epilepsy, autoimmune encephalitis, infections, metabolic disorders.
    • Medications.
  • Key Investigations: Blood tests, urine drug screen, EEG, neuroimaging (MRI preferred).

  • Apply DSM-5/ICD-11 criteria.

⭐ Very Early Onset Psychosis (VEOS) is psychosis onset before age 13; Early Onset Psychosis (EOS) before 18. VEOS often has poorer prognosis.

Management & Prognosis - Healing Pathways

  • Multimodal Treatment: Essential for optimal outcomes.
    • Pharmacotherapy: Second-generation antipsychotics (SGAs) e.g., risperidone, aripiprazole, are first-line. Start low, titrate slow.
      • Monitor closely: Metabolic effects (weight gain, dyslipidemia), EPS, hyperprolactinemia.
    • Psychosocial Interventions: Cognitive Behavioral Therapy for psychosis (CBTp), family therapy & psychoeducation, social skills training.
    • Early Intervention Services (EIS): Comprehensive, phase-specific care; critical for improving long-term trajectory.
  • Prognosis Factors:
    • Better: Short Duration of Untreated Psychosis (DUP), acute onset, good premorbid functioning, strong family support, affective symptoms.
    • Worse: Long DUP, insidious onset, poor premorbid function, substance abuse, prominent negative symptoms, high expressed emotion in family.

    ⭐ Shorter Duration of Untreated Psychosis (DUP) is a key modifiable factor strongly predicting better functional and symptomatic outcomes.

  • Outcomes: Variable; early, sustained, and comprehensive treatment significantly improves prognosis.

Psychosis Treatment Pathway for Routine Referrals

High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways

  • Early-Onset Schizophrenia (EOS) <18 yrs; Very Early-Onset (VEOS) <13 yrs, linked to poorer prognosis & cognitive deficits.
  • Auditory hallucinations most common; visual hallucinations & thought disorder more frequent than in adults.
  • Key differentials: mood disorders with psychosis, Autism Spectrum Disorder (ASD), substance-induced psychosis.
  • Second-generation antipsychotics (SGAs) (e.g., risperidone) are first-line; monitor metabolic side effects (weight gain, dyslipidemia).
  • Comprehensive treatment requires pharmacotherapy plus psychosocial interventions (family therapy, CBTp).

Practice Questions: Psychosis in Children and Adolescents

Test your understanding with these related questions

A patient complains of sadness of mood, increased lethargy, early morning awakening, loss of interest and reports no will to live and hears voices asking her to kill self. What is the diagnosis?

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Flashcards: Psychosis in Children and Adolescents

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UCLA/Lovaas-based Model of behavioral intervention is used in the treatment of _____ Disorder

TAP TO REVEAL ANSWER

UCLA/Lovaas-based Model of behavioral intervention is used in the treatment of _____ Disorder

Autism Spectrum

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