Exploration of Neuroprotective Therapy (Dec 2022)

Catatonia in two women with Parkinson’s disease treated with electroconvulsive therapy

  • Camilla Elefante,
  • Giulio E. Brancati,
  • Beniamino Tripodi,
  • Samuele Torrigiani,
  • Lorenzo Lattanzi,
  • Pierpaolo Medda,
  • Giulio Perugi

DOI
https://doi.org/10.37349/ent.2022.00032
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 2, no. 6
pp. 256 – 263

Abstract

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Catatonia is a neuropsychiatric syndrome characterized by a broad range of motor, behavioral and cognitive abnormalities. Catatonia and Parkinson’s disease (PD) may show partially overlapping symptomatology. For this reason, catatonia could be misdiagnosed and overlooked in patients with severe PD, leading to a delay in proper treatment with benzodiazepines or electroconvulsive therapy (ECT). Two cases of women with PD and catatonia who have been admitted and treated with ECT at the University Hospital of Pisa are described here. Both had a history of bipolar disorder and developed withdrawn catatonia, in the context of affective episodes, approximately one year after the diagnosis of PD. In both cases, ECT was needed and successfully led to the remission of catatonic symptoms, without cognitive worsening. Since ECT appears to effectively treat catatonia in patients with PD, clinicians should consider it as a therapeutic option.

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