Neuropsychiatry

On this page

Delirium - Brain Fog Alert!

  • Acute, fluctuating disturbance in attention, awareness, & cognition.
  • Core: Rapid onset, fluctuating course (sundowning), inattention, disorganized thinking, altered consciousness.
  • Causes: 📌 DELIRIUMS: Drugs (new, withdrawal, toxicity), Electrolyte imbalance, Lack of drugs (withdrawal), Infection (UTI, pneumonia), Reduced sensory input, Intracranial (stroke, bleed), Urinary/fecal retention, Myocardial/pulmonary (MI, PE, hypoxia), Surgery.
  • Assessment: Confusion Assessment Method (CAM).
  • Management: Treat underlying cause. Supportive care (reorientation, hydration). Low-dose antipsychotics (e.g., Haloperidol 0.5-1mg) for severe agitation.

    ⭐ Haloperidol is often used for agitation in delirium, but benzodiazepines (e.g., lorazepam) are preferred in alcohol withdrawal delirium or delirium due to sedative-hypnotic withdrawal. Confusion Assessment Method (CAM) Short Form Criteria tool visual representation)

Dementia & Amnestic Syndromes - Memory Maze Medley

⭐ Wernicke's encephalopathy (thiamine deficiency) presents with the classic triad: ophthalmoplegia, ataxia, and confusion; Korsakoff's syndrome is the chronic amnestic state (anterograde and retrograde amnesia, confabulation) that can follow.

  • Dementia: Progressive global cognitive decline (memory, executive, language) impairing daily function.
    • Types: Alzheimer's (plaques, tangles); Vascular (stepwise); Lewy Body (fluctuations, hallucinations, parkinsonism); Frontotemporal (personality/language changes).
    • Screen: MMSE, MoCA. Rule out reversible causes (B12, thyroid).
  • Amnestic Syndromes: Predominant memory loss (anterograde/retrograde); other cognition relatively spared.
    • Korsakoff's: Follows Wernicke's. Features: severe anterograde amnesia, confabulation.

Neuropsychiatric Sequelae of Neurological Illnesses - Brain Disorder Fallout

  • Stroke (CVA):
    • Post-stroke depression (PSD): Most common.

      ⭐ Depression is the most common psychiatric comorbidity after stroke, occurring in up to one-third of patients, and significantly impacts recovery and quality of life.

    • Anxiety, apathy, emotional lability, catastrophic reactions. Vascular dementia.
  • Traumatic Brain Injury (TBI):
    • Depression, anxiety (GAD, PTSD), irritability, aggression, personality changes (frontal lobe).
  • Epilepsy:
    • Interictal: Depression (common), anxiety, psychosis.
    • Ictal/Postictal: Fear, automatisms, confusion, mood changes.
  • Parkinson's Disease:
    • Depression, anxiety, psychosis (often medication-induced), apathy, impulse control disorders.
  • Multiple Sclerosis (MS):
    • Depression (very common), anxiety, cognitive impairment, emotional incontinence.
  • Huntington's Disease:
    • Depression, anxiety, psychosis, irritability, personality changes, OCD-like symptoms.

oka

Functional Neurological Disorders - Mind's Mysterious Manifestations

⭐ A key feature in diagnosing Functional Neurological Disorder (Conversion Disorder) is the presence of positive clinical signs of inconsistency or incongruence with recognized neurological disease (e.g., Hoover's sign, abductor sign, tremor entrainment).

  • Core Concept: Neurological symptoms (e.g., weakness, sensory loss, seizures, movement disorders) not explained by a neurological disease. Symptoms are genuine and cause distress.
  • Key Diagnostic Clues:
    • Inconsistency of symptoms (e.g., variable weakness).
    • Positive signs (e.g., Hoover's sign for leg weakness, tremor entrainment).
    • La belle indifférence (not always present).
  • Common Types:
    • Functional weakness/paralysis.
    • Functional movement disorders (tremor, dystonia).
    • Psychogenic Non-Epileptic Seizures (PNES).
    • Functional sensory symptoms.
  • Management: Psychoeducation, CBT, physiotherapy, multidisciplinary approach.

High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways

  • Delirium: acute, fluctuating, common in medically ill; EEG slowing is a key feature.
  • Wernicke-Korsakoff Syndrome: due to thiamine (B1) deficiency; presents with ataxia, ophthalmoplegia, confusion; affects mammillary bodies.
  • Neuropsychiatric SLE: can manifest as psychosis, mood disorders, or cognitive impairment.
  • HIV-Associated Neurocognitive Disorder (HAND): ranges from asymptomatic impairment to HIV dementia.
  • Catatonia: can be secondary to medical conditions; lorazepam challenge is diagnostic and therapeutic.
  • Pseudodementia: cognitive decline due to depression, often reversible with antidepressant therapy.
  • Frontotemporal Dementia (FTD): presents with prominent behavioral changes (disinhibition, apathy) or language deficits early on; memory is relatively preserved initially compared to Alzheimer's disease.

Practice Questions: Neuropsychiatry

Test your understanding with these related questions

In a patient with chronic alcoholism, which nutrient deficiency is most likely to cause neurological symptoms?

1 of 5

Flashcards: Neuropsychiatry

1/9

Delirium is more commonly associated with _____ hallucinations.

TAP TO REVEAL ANSWER

Delirium is more commonly associated with _____ hallucinations.

visual

browseSpaceflip

Enjoying this lesson?

Get full access to all lessons, practice questions, and more.

Start Your Free Trial