Catatonic Episodes Related to Substance Use: A Cross-Sectional Study Using Electronic Healthcare Records.

IF 1.5 4区 医学 Q3 PSYCHIATRY
Su Ying Yeoh, Emmert Roberts, Fraser Scott, Timothy R Nicholson, Anthony S David, Jonathan P Rogers
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引用次数: 9

Abstract

Objective: Substance use has increasingly been linked to the onset of catatonic episodes; however, no large observational studies have examined this association. This study aimed to identify catatonic episodes temporally associated with acute intoxication, withdrawal or chronic substance use, investigate which substances were involved, and compare clinical characteristics of substance-related and non-substance-related catatonic episodes. Methods: This study retrospectively identified all catatonic episodes recorded in an electronic case register hosted at a large secondary mental health trust in London, UK. Episodes were categorized as substance-related if the clinical record reported either a positive urine drug screen, an ICD-10 diagnosis of a mental or behavioral disorder due to substance use, or documented substance use between two weeks prior to the catatonic episode and the date of the catatonic episode. Results: 108 of 2130 catatonic episodes (5.1%) were deemed substance-related. The number of contemporaneously reported substance-related episodes increased between 2007 and 2016 [r = 0.72, p = 0.02]. Episodes in the context of acute intoxication (n = 54) were most frequently related to cannabis (n = 31) or cocaine (n = 5) use, whilst those in the context of drug withdrawal (n = 8) were most commonly related to alcohol, opioids and benzodiazepines. There were 50 episodes of catatonia associated with chronic substance use without intoxication or withdrawal, of which the majority were related to cannabis use (n = 37). 21 episodes had overlapping intoxication, withdrawal and chronic use of different substances within an episode. Compared to catatonic episodes not related to substance use, episodes of substance-related catatonia occurred in individuals who were younger (mean age 31.3 years [SD 12.2] vs 35.7 years [SD 16.3], p = 0.01) and more likely to be men (74.0% vs 54.3%, p < 0.001). The clinical features of catatonia were similar between the two groups. Conclusions: A relatively small proportion of catatonic episodes were temporally associated with reported substance use within their electronic records. Substance-related catatonic episodes were mostly related to cannabis use, but other substances including cocaine, alcohol, opioids and benzodiazepines were sometimes implicated. This is likely an underestimate of substance-related catatonia use due to issues with documentation and appropriate investigation.

与药物使用相关的紧张性发作:一项使用电子医疗记录的横断面研究
目的:药物使用与紧张性发作的关系越来越密切;然而,没有大型观察性研究检验过这种关联。本研究旨在确定与急性中毒、戒断或慢性物质使用有关的紧张性发作,调查涉及哪些物质,并比较物质相关和非物质相关紧张性发作的临床特征。方法:本研究回顾性地确定了英国伦敦一家大型二级精神卫生信托机构的电子病例登记册中记录的所有紧张性发作。如果临床记录报告尿液药物筛查阳性,ICD-10诊断为药物使用导致的精神或行为障碍,或在紧张性发作前两周至紧张性发作日期之间记录的药物使用,则将发作归类为物质相关。结果:2130例紧张性发作中有108例(5.1%)被认为与药物有关。2007年至2016年间,同期报告的药物相关事件数量有所增加[r = 0.72, p = 0.02]。急性中毒(n = 54)的发作最常与大麻(n = 31)或可卡因(n = 5)的使用有关,而戒断药物(n = 8)的发作最常与酒精、类阿片和苯二氮卓类药物有关。有50次紧张症发作与慢性物质使用有关,没有中毒或戒断,其中大多数与大麻使用有关(n = 37)。21次发作有重叠的中毒,戒断和长期使用不同的物质在一个发作。与与药物使用无关的紧张症发作相比,药物相关紧张症发作发生在年龄较小的个体中(平均年龄31.3岁[SD 12.2] vs 35.7岁[SD 16.3], p = 0.01),男性发生率更高(74.0% vs 54.3%, p)。结论:相对较小比例的紧张症发作在时间上与电子记录中报告的药物使用相关。与物质有关的紧张性发作大多与使用大麻有关,但可卡因、酒精、阿片类药物和苯二氮卓类药物等其他物质有时也有牵连。由于文件和适当调查的问题,这可能低估了与物质相关的紧张症的使用。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
4.90
自引率
13.60%
发文量
20
期刊介绍: Journal of Dual Diagnosis is a quarterly, international publication that focuses on the full spectrum of complexities regarding dual diagnosis. The co-occurrence of mental health and substance use disorders, or “dual diagnosis,” is one of the quintessential issues in behavioral health. Why do such high rates of co-occurrence exist? What does it tell us about risk profiles? How do these linked disorders affect people, their families, and the communities in which they live? What are the natural paths to recovery? What specific treatments are most helpful and how can new ones be developed? How can we enhance the implementation of evidence-based practices at clinical, administrative, and policy levels? How can we help clients to learn active recovery skills and adopt needed supports, clinicians to master new interventions, programs to implement effective services, and communities to foster healthy adjustment? The Journal addresses each of these perplexing challenges.
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