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Psychosis due to medical conditions

Psychosis due to medical conditions

Psychosis due to medical conditions

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Core Concepts - Not Just Delirium

  • Distinguished from delirium by a clear sensorium and normal level of consciousness. Psychotic symptoms are the core feature, not a consequence of attentional deficits.
  • Requires evidence from history, physical exam, or labs that hallucinations/delusions are a direct physiological result of a specific medical condition.
  • A close temporal association between the medical illness (onset, exacerbation) and psychotic symptoms is essential for diagnosis.
  • Common etiologies:
    • Neurologic: Seizures (post-ictal), CNS tumors, stroke, Huntington's disease
    • Endocrine: Cushing's syndrome, thyroid/parathyroid disorders
    • Autoimmune/Inflammatory: SLE, anti-NMDA receptor encephalitis

⭐ Visual hallucinations are more common than auditory ones, a key feature distinguishing it from primary psychotic disorders like schizophrenia.

Common Culprits - The Body's Rebellion

  • Neurologic Causes

    • CNS Infections (e.g., HSV encephalitis, neurosyphilis)
    • Cerebrovascular Disease (Strokes, vasculitis)
    • Degenerative Disorders (Huntington's, Lewy Body Dementia)
    • Seizure-related (ictal, post-ictal)
    • Space-occupying lesions (neoplasms)
    • Autoimmune (e.g., Anti-NMDA receptor encephalitis, SLE cerebritis)
    • Traumatic Brain Injury (TBI)
  • Endocrine & Metabolic

    • Thyroid dysfunction (thyrotoxicosis, myxedema madness)
    • Adrenal disorders (Cushing's, Addison's)
    • Electrolyte imbalance (↓Na+, ↑Ca2+)
    • Hypoglycemia
    • Organ failure (uremia, hepatic encephalopathy)
  • Systemic & Nutritional

    • Infections (HIV, sepsis)
    • Vitamin deficiencies (B12, B1, B3)

Anti-NMDA Receptor Encephalitis: A critical diagnosis to consider in young patients (especially women) with new-onset psychosis, seizures, dyskinesias, and autonomic instability. Frequently paraneoplastic, associated with ovarian teratomas.

Workup & Management - Sleuthing & Soothing

  • Core Principle: Identify and treat the underlying medical etiology. Psychosis should resolve as the medical condition improves.

  • Initial Workup:

    • History & Physical: Focus on new medications, substance use, and systemic signs of illness.
    • Labs: CBC, CMP, TSH, Vitamin B12/folate, urinalysis, urine drug screen.
    • Targeted Tests: RPR/VDRL (syphilis), HIV screen, ANA (lupus), ceruloplasmin (Wilson's), LP (if CNS infection/inflammation suspected).
    • Imaging/Function: Brain CT/MRI, EEG.
  • Management:
    • Primary: Address the root medical cause (e.g., antibiotics for infection, steroids for autoimmune).
    • Symptomatic: Use low-dose, short-term antipsychotics (e.g., Haloperidol, Risperidone) for agitation/psychosis.
    • Environment: Ensure patient safety and provide a calm, structured setting.

Exam Favorite: Always consider anti-NMDA receptor encephalitis in young women presenting with new-onset psychosis, psychiatric symptoms, and subtle neurological signs (e.g., seizures, dyskinesias).

Brain MRI: FLAIR hyperintensity in limbic encephalitis

High-Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways

  • This is a diagnosis of exclusion, requiring a thorough workup to rule out other causes.
  • A clear temporal relationship between the general medical condition and the psychosis is essential for diagnosis.
  • Be suspicious with atypical features like late age of onset, visual hallucinations, or fluctuating consciousness.
  • Key causes include CNS disease (tumors, seizures), endocrinopathies, autoimmune disorders (SLE), and metabolic disturbances.
  • Management priority is to treat the underlying medical condition first and foremost.

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