Psychosis in Medical Conditions

Psychosis in Medical Conditions

Psychosis in Medical Conditions

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Defining Secondary Psychosis - Medically‑Induced Madness

  • Psychosis directly due to a general medical condition's physiological effects.
  • DSM-5 Highlights (📌 HPL-ND-NOD):
    • Prominent hallucinations/delusions.
    • Evidence (History, Physical, Labs) of medical cause (HPL).
    • Not during Delirium (ND).
    • Not another mental Disorder (NOD).
  • Temporal link: Psychosis onset/worsening tied to medical illness.

⭐ The diagnosis requires evidence that the psychosis is a direct pathophysiological consequence of the medical condition.

Common Medical Causes - Body's Betrayal Brain

📌 NEuro MITES V Mnemonic: (Neurologic, Endocrine, Metabolic, Infectious, Trauma/Toxin, Electrolyte, Systemic/Autoimmune, Vitamin deficiency)

Category (Mnemonic)ExamplesKey Features
NeurologicalEpilepsy, tumors, stroke, TBI, Huntington's, Wilson'sSeizures, focal deficits, cognitive/motor Δs
EndocrineThyroid, Adrenal, ParathyroidMood/energy/weight Δs, electrolyte issues
MetabolicUremia, Hepatic enceph., Hypoglycemia, PorphyriaConfusion, asterixis, autonomic/skin Δs
InfectiousHIV, Syphilis, Herpes enceph., NeurocysticercosisFever, headache, meningism, focal signs
Trauma/Toxin(Mnemonic 'T'; specifics elsewhere)(Consider in DDx)
Electrolyte$Na⁺$, $Ca²⁺$, $Mg²⁺$ imbalanceConfusion, weakness, arrhythmias
Systemic/AutoimmuneSLE, Anti-NMDA R encephalitisMulti-system, autoantibodies, psych onset
Vitamin DeficiencyB12, Niacin (B3, Pellagra: 3Ds), Thiamine (B1, Wernicke-K.)Neuropathy, cognitive Δs, specific syndromes

⭐ Anti-NMDA receptor encephalitis: key autoimmune cause; prominent psychosis, esp. young females.

Clinical Clues & Workup - Red Flag Roundup

  • Clinical Red Flags (Suspect Medical Cause): 📌 Mnemonic: 'OLDER Vitals'
    • Older age of onset (>40 years).
    • Late onset (new psychosis at an atypical age).
    • Different hallucinations (prominent visual, tactile, olfactory vs. primarily auditory).
    • Erratic course (fluctuating symptoms, lucid intervals).
    • Rapid onset (acute or subacute).
    • Vitals instability (e.g., fever, tachycardia, BP changes) AND/OR Neurological signs (e.g., focal deficits, seizures, ataxia).
    • Clouding of consciousness (key indicator of delirium overlap).
    • Recent medical illness, surgery, or new medication/substance change.

⭐ Visual hallucinations in an adult with new-onset psychosis strongly suggest an underlying medical or substance-induced cause over a primary psychotic disorder.

  • Diagnostic Workup Algorithm:
*   **Initial Labs:** CBC, CMP (electrolytes, glucose, renal & liver function), TFTs, urinalysis, urine toxicology.
*   **Further Investigations (guided by clinical suspicion):** Vitamin B12/folate, syphilis serology, HIV test, autoimmune screen (ANA, anti-NMDAR Ab), CSF analysis, EEG, Brain imaging (CT/MRI).

Management Blueprint - Fixing the Fault

  • Treat Underlying Medical Condition: Paramount, often curative.
  • Symptomatic Management:
    • Antipsychotics (APs): Cautious use. 'Start low, go slow'.
      • Atypical APs (risperidone, olanzapine) preferred: ↓ EPS risk.
      • Monitor: QTc, metabolic effects.
      • Short-term use ideal.
      • ⚠️ Avoid high anticholinergic APs (elderly/delirium).
    • Benzodiazepines (BDZs): For agitation/anxiety, use cautiously (risk: disinhibition, worsening delirium).
  • Supportive Care:
    • Safe environment.
    • Reorientation.
    • Family involvement.
  • Prognosis: Good if underlying cause treated.

⭐ The primary goal in managing psychosis due to a medical condition is to treat the underlying medical illness; antipsychotics are adjunctive for symptom control.

High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways

  • Rule out medical/substance causes first in any new-onset psychosis.
  • Key triggers: delirium, dementia, endocrine (thyroid), autoimmune (SLE, anti-NMDA), infections (HIV), metabolic, B12 deficiency.
  • Temporal link between illness and psychosis is vital for diagnosis.
  • Features: often visual hallucinations, fluctuating course, cognitive decline.
  • Treat the underlying medical cause primarily; use low-dose antipsychotics cautiously.
  • Investigations: EEG, neuroimaging, targeted lab tests are essential.
  • Remember iatrogenic psychosis (e.g., steroids, L-dopa).

Practice Questions: Psychosis in Medical Conditions

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Which of the following will have an organic cause?

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What endocrinopathy is commonly associated with schizophrenia?_____

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What endocrinopathy is commonly associated with schizophrenia?_____

Hypothyroidism

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