- 1The D'Or Institute for Research and Education, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil
- 2The Federal University of the State of Rio de Janeiro, Gaffrée e Guinle Hospital, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil
- 3The Federal University of Rio de Janeiro, Clementino Fraga Filho Hospital, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil
Catatonia is a psychomotor syndrome common to several medical and neuropsychiatric disorders. Here, we report on the case of a 95-year-old woman who underwent a radical change in personality characterized by sexual disinhibition, and physical and verbal aggressiveness. Over several months, she developed verbal stereotypies, gait deterioration, and double incontinence. She eventually developed mutism and an active opposition to all attempts to be fed or cared for. Benzodiazepines, olanzapine and electroconvulsive therapy were of no benefit. Magnetic resonance imaging revealed asymmetric (more severe on the right) frontotemporal, parietal, and upper brainstem atrophy. She died from sepsis without recovering from stupor seven years after the onset of symptoms. We believe that the initial behavioral disinhibition was related to the frontotemporal injury, whereas catatonic stupor reflected the progression of the degenerative process to the parietal cortices. Our case adds to the small number of cases of catatonia as a symptom of degenerative dementia. It also supports the idea that damage to the parietal cortex gives rise to pathological avoidance of which catatonic stupor represents an extreme form.
Introduction
Originally conceived as a cyclical illness that unfolded along a predictable course that usually ended in dementia (1) or a subtype of schizophrenia (2), catatonia is currently regarded as a complex psychomotor syndrome common to several mental and physical disorders (3). As a symptom of cerebral and systemic disease, catatonia is as non-specific as, for example, delirium or coma (4). For the purposes of the present communication, we use “catatonic stupor” to refer to a particular symptom of catatonia in which all sorts of interaction with the environment are abolished or significantly diminished; this critically includes interpersonal communication by means of gesture, writing and speech (mutism). According to this view, a patient who is mute but communicates his intentions and understanding through gesturing may be catatonic, but not in catatonic stupor (5, 6). In contrast to “neurological” stupor (7), catatonic stupor is one of the most dramatic presentations of catatonia, in which patients lie mute, immobile, and unwilling to entertain meaningful interaction with the environment (5). At times, they adopt odd and uncomfortable postures, their bodies being animated only by stereotypies of head, gaze, mouth, and hands (8). Catatonic stupor is an extreme form of negativism, which encompasses a host of symptoms that reflect an active or passive refusal to interact with people and objects (9). Like catatonia in general, catatonic stupor is a non-specific syndrome common to a variety of systemic and neuropsychiatric diseases whose prompt recognition may be lifesaving (10). Neurologists have long known that catatonia may be the chief or sole manifestation of brain disease (11). However, the first unquestionable evidence for a causal link between catatonia and brain damage was provided by cases of lethargic encephalitis, which raged in the Northern Hemisphere in the first quarter of the twentieth century (12). Interest in this association gained new impetus following the recognition that most classical psychopathological syndromes, such as catatonic stupor, may be replicated by certain forms of frontotemporal dementia (FTD), especially in their early stages (13–15).
Research on the prevalence of catatonia in the elderly has met with conflicting results. Part of the discrepancies are probably due to differences in the diagnostic composition of the samples of patients studied and the methods of study. For example, catatonia was diagnosed in 40% of the 106 patients admitted to an acute geriatric psychiatric ward. The authors noticed a strong reciprocal association between depression and catatonia in their sample (16). In contrast, in 98 patients over 65 years of age admitted to the psychiatric ward of a general hospital, Takács et al. (17) found a prevalence of catatonia in 17% of the cases, most of which were due to a general medical condition. Because catatonic symptoms are commonly found in certain types of primary neurodegenerative dementias [e.g., Lakshmana et al. (18); Ishmora et al. (19)], it is surprising that dementia was not particularly associated with catatonia in either study. The reasons for this are unclear, but physicians' lack of familiarity with the manifestations of catatonia may be a sufficient explanation in most cases.
The goal of this communication is to present the case of an elderly woman who underwent a radical change in personality that evolved into a catatonic stupor from which she would never recover. Written informed consent was obtained from her only daughter for the publication of the case as it is.
Case Presentation
A 95-year-old right-handed housewife, native Portuguese speaker, without a premorbid history of neurological or psychiatric illnesses and 5 years of formal education, was brought by her daughter with the eyes shut and unresponsive to all sorts of verbal and gestural attempts to elicit any kind of intelligible response. At the age of eighty-nine, the patient became afraid of being robbed and assaulted, especially at home during the night. Her daughter and son-in-law, with whom she had lived for many years, did not at first give much importance to the fact; they assumed that, after all, their neighborhood was one of the areas in the city in which drug trafficking was a reason for major public concern. In their view, the patient was understandably apprehensive. However, they did not fail to realize that the patient, a model of moral strength, was unusually afraid of a situation that had never intimidated her before. No matter how hard her daughter assured her or attempted to convince her of how safe they were at their seventh-floor apartment, the patient's fears increased and became especially troublesome when she started coming to their bed at dawn without warning. A few months after unsuccessful attempts to calm her down, her daughter took her to a psychiatrist. She received a diagnosis of major depression and was prescribed 50 mg of sertraline at bedtime. She improved in a few weeks and did not bother her daughter at night for a while. However, a few months later, they noted that she was less active and socially withdrawn. Over time, she would react emotionally only to her little great-grandson whom she had always loved. Although she stayed up all day long, she spoke only when people addressed her directly or when she wanted to drink or eat. The daily dose of sertraline was increased to 100 mg without benefit. The psychiatrist then entertained the possibility of SSRI-related apathy, and gradually suspended the drug. As the apathy did not improve, she was prescribed a maintenance dose of 50 mg of sertraline. Because psychomotor agitation did not recur, further changes in medication were not done.
Three years later, her relatives noticed that the patient's lifelong stern and moralist, albeit gentle, character was undergoing a remarkable change. Her language became “liberal,” and she would insult anyone who attempted to take care of her. At the same time, she became “unusually kind” to her grandsons as well as to her granddaughters' boyfriends. She confided to a close friend of her daughter that she was engaged to a married man, but did not want her family to know about the affair before he divorced his wife. When she had to go out for some reason, she insisted to sit in the front seat by the cab driver. On these occasions, her daughter, who sat in the back seat, had to keep a constant watch on her, because the patient would surreptitiously try to touch the driver's private parts. She compulsively engaged in genital self-stimulation and attained several orgasms per day accompanied by loud moans, unconcerned about being observed. Although her food preferences did not change, her refusal to eat incurred in considerable loss of weight. A year before her first appointment with us, she began speaking a strange language, “as if she were ‘speaking in tongues'.” Over the ensuing months, her gait deteriorated, and she eventually became unable to walk and doubly incontinent.
In the few weeks that antedated our first appointment, she became mute and would rarely open her eyes. By then, she would spend most of the time laying over the left side of the body embracing her flexed legs in a genuflected attitude. She would not ask for water, food, or grooming; on the contrary, she stubbornly refused any kind of contact, contracting her lips and slapping anyone who offered her food and water.
On examination, she kept her eyes shut most of the time (Figure 1A), vigorously resisting even gentle attempts by the examiner to open them (Figure 1B); she sustained passively imposed attitudes of body segments for several minutes (Figure 1C). Sometimes, she opened the eyes and answered simple questions with unintelligible words (for example, “Sabagaah” to “what day of the week is today?”). At times, she echoed the examiner's speech, (“1, 2, 3…”). Oral prehension and right manual grasp reflexes were easily elicited by stroking her lips and palm, respectively. At the time, she met 12 of 14 screening items and scored 41 of 69 points on the Bush-Francis Catatonia Rating Scale (Supplementary Table 1A). On the Northoff Catatonia Scale, she obtained a total of 34 points (Motor subscale = 10; Affective subscale = 6, Behavioral subscale = 18). A challenge of 10 mg diazepam IV produced no effect. Olanzapine, 10 mg of at bedtime, was prescribed for 6 weeks with no benefit, and was suspended. Likewise, six sessions of electroconvulsive therapy failed to produce any benefit and were discontinued. Electroconvulsive therapy was administered three times per week with a square-wave, brief-pulse, constant-current device. After the patient was sedated with a short-acting anesthetic and curarized, a 5-sec electrical stimulus was applied simultaneously to each temple. Following the end of stimulation, a convulsive seizure lasting 20–30 secs was seen in the forearm using the pressure-cuff technique. No benefit was noted after 6 sessions, and the treatment was also discontinued. Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) revealed asymmetric cerebrocerebellar and brainstem atrophy, which was more marked in the right frontal and parietal lobes, right ventral midbrain and pons as well as in the anterior temporal lobes (Figure 2). An abnormally high caudate index (= 0.19; normal ≤ 0.09) and a normal bifrontal index (0.37; normal ≥ 0.30) indicated caudate atrophy greater than expected from hemispheric atrophy alone (20). A diagnosis of behavioral variant frontotemporal dementia (bvFTD) was made (Supplementary Table 1B). A comprehensive battery of laboratory tests that included blood cell counts, ESR, glucose, BUN, serum lipid screening, thyroid hormones and TSH, PTH, hepatic function tests, VDRL and FTA-ABS, and B and D vitamins were negative or within normal limits. Over the ensuing years, the patient was treated conservatively at home, being fed through gastrostomy. Given the lack of response to several medications, no other attempts to treat catatonia were made. In her last days she developed an acute respiratory infection that prompted her admission to a public hospital where she stayed for a few days. Shortly before her death, she fell into a coma due to sepsis. She died at age 96, seven years after the first symptoms of the disease (Figure 3).
Figure 1. Persistent catatonic features of patient. (A) This spontaneously adopted attitude could remain unchanged for hours on end (catalepsy). (B) Active opposition to passive elevation of the lids (active negativism). (C) Sustained attitude of the left arm which was passively imposed by examiner (waxy flexibility).
Figure 2. MRI of patient obtained during the stage of catatonic stupor. (A,B) Vermal atrophy, and volumetric reduction of right side of ventral pons (A) and cerebral peduncle (B). (C,D) Enlargement of sylvian fissures (S), more pronounced on the right, is evident on both axial (C) and coronal (D) planes. (E) Enlargement of intraparietal sulci (IPS), more pronounced on the right. (F) More evident atrophy of polar and superomedial prefrontal lobes (circled in white) in relation to the posteromedial parietal lobes. L, left; R, right.
Discussion
Our patient developed an insidious change in personality characterized by sexual disinhibition, and verbal and physical aggressiveness against anyone who attempted to feed and groom her. Her speech became increasingly non-sensical until her verbal output became restricted to a few words, echolalia, and interjections. Her emotions became coarse, and she lost her usual social graces and manners. Lacking insight into these changes, her behavior became quite troublesome for caregivers and a source of embarrassment for her relatives. During the early stages of the disease, her bizarre social behavior contrasted with a relative preservation of visuospatial orientation and recognition of friends and relatives. She eventually progressed into a catatonic stupor from which she never recovered until she died. MRI showed predominant atrophy of the frontobasal and anterior temporal lobes as well as of the cerebral peduncle and basis pontis, all of which were more pronounced on the right; the ventral brainstem atrophy was probably due to secondary degeneration of the frontotemporopontine tracts (21). Caudate atrophy, in contrast, was fairly symmetric (Figure 2). These findings were consistent with a clinicoanatomical diagnosis of probable bvFTD (Table 1). The diagnosis of bvFTD was further supported by the asymmetrical hemispheric atrophy, which is typical of the frontotemporal degenerations (36). The age of our patient differs from that of most FTD cases, which usually manifest much earlier. However, this should not be a deterrent to diagnosis as there are well-documented cases of FTD beginning after 65 years of age.
Catatonic Stupor in Frontotemporal Dementia
As a rule, catatonia should be suspected of in patients exhibiting odd, hyperactive, or akinetic behaviors (39). Diagnostic criteria and rating scales are useful guides for the recognition and rating of catatonic symptoms (40–42). Although catatonia has been described in a few instances of Alzheimer's (43) and Lewy body disease (44), most cases of catatonia in dementia have been reported in patients with FTD (Table 1). In fact, catatonic symptoms such as perseverative and stereotyped behavior, echolalia, and mutism are core features of current operational definitions of bvFTD (37, 38). It is thus somewhat surprising that catatonia has not been reported more often in FTD, and that catatonic stupor has been reported even less frequently. In all, we were able to retrieve 21 cases of catatonia as a symptom of FTD from the literature. As shown in Table 1, nearly half developed catatonic stupor at some point. Atrophy of the frontal lobes alone or associated with temporal atrophy was present in all cases. In nine patients, the anatomical evidence was supplemented by functional alterations in the atrophic regions, as shown by EEG (N = 1), SPECT (N = 2), or PET (N = 6).
Catatonia in general, and catatonic stupor in particular, may pose unanticipated diagnostic challenges in patients with dementia (25). For example, Suzuki et al. (26) reported on the case of a 51-year-old man with catatonia, functional decline, emotional blunting, craving for sweets, mania, and frontal lobe atrophy on MRI. Electroconvulsive treatment completely resolved all symptoms, including dementia. The initial diagnosis of FTD was eventually changed to bipolar disorder.
The possibility that catatonia may be more common in FTD than usually reported (27, 29) does not mean that FTD is the only possible diagnosis in elderly patients who are mute and unresponsive, for at least seven superficially similar conditions may be distinguished on phenomenological, pathophysiological, and neuropathological grounds (Supplementary Table 2). In our practice, the three conditions that have most often been a source of diagnostic dilemmas are the same that have also been thus reported in the literature, namely, coma (45), akinetic mutism (46), and “psychogenic” (47). The correct diagnosis of catatonia and catatonic stupor will expectedly increase as awareness of its key features also increases among generalists and specialists. Even a cursory look at the literature of recent years shows that this awareness is increasing rapidly and exponentially.
The Neural Underpinnings of Catatonic Stupor
If, on the one hand, little can be said about the neural underpinnings of the catatonic stupor of our patient, on the other hand, this single case fits nicely into what is currently known on the subject. The strength invested to oppose external influences, a hallmark of catatonic stupor, points to the engagement of neural circuits whose complexity contrasts with the more fundamental sleep-wake rhythms and reflex eye movements that survive in unresponsive wakeful patients (48). Several years ago, Denny-Brown (49) postulated the existence of two neural systems that mediate approach-avoidance inclinations toward people, objects, and events. This author was one of the first to show that lesions of the frontal lobes may give rise to actions that vary in complexity from the simpler grasp reflex (50) to complex utilization behaviors (51), all of which point to an abnormally heightened inclination to approach people and objects; parietal lesions, in contrast, enhance avoidance and withdrawal from the environment (52). This functional reciprocity indicates that the frontal and parietal lobes promote avoidance and approach behaviors, respectively (53). An analogous mechanism may be at play at least in a few cases of catatonic stupor. This hypothesis is supported by clinicopathological associations between catatonia with or without stupor and bilateral (54, 55) or unilateral right (56, 57) parietal lesions, respectively.
These early interpretations of the neurological underpinnings of catatonic symptom complexes concur with modern neuroimaging findings, which have provided additional insights into the neural mechanisms at work. The premotor, cingulate motor, and supplementary motor areas may be a critical correlate of the akinetic, or retarded, psychomotor symptoms of catatonia (58). Dysfunction of intrinsic (i.e., postsynaptic) cortical neurons that express the GABAA receptor in these regions may be the substrate of the well-known remission of catatonic stupor by benzodiazepines (59) and its prompt reversal by flumazenil (60). In line with the present case, there is evidence that among patients with schizophrenia spectrum disorder, catatonia correlates with reduced cortical volume in frontoparietal regions (61).
Catatonic Stupor, Abulia, Akinetic Mutism, and the Unresponsive Wakefulness Syndrome (Formerly, Apallic-Vegetative State)
From a neurological perspective, catatonic stupor is more complex than abulia minor, akinetic mutism, or the unresponsive wakefulness syndrome, all of which are common end-stages of dementia from diverse etiologies (62). Although sharing many points in common, abulia and catatonia differ in critical ways. For example, many years ago, we reported on the case of a patient with a diagnosis of coma due to a spontaneous hemorrhage localized to Nauta's mesolimbic area (63). The patient lay immobile with the eyes shut without spontaneous speech or movement. Several days later, a Resident was shocked to see that he was awake and perfectly aware of his surroundings when he casually asked him to open the mouth. As it turned out, he was not able to open the eyes because the hemorrhage destroyed the oculomotor nuclei and fascicles. He was so abulic that he never attempted to initiate any kind of contact, not even to ask for help; in contrast to akinetic mutism, he answered by gestures whenever prompted; moreover, he showed no signs of catatonia. This case supports the view that abulia and catatonia differ in critical aspects: even though patients with catatonia are often abulic, not all abulic patients are catatonic. It also endorses the view that abulia is linked to destruction of the ascending projections from the ventral tegmental area (64), a hypothesis that has been partially verified in a recent MRI study that found that the mesencephalon is shrunken in catatonic patients with schizophrenia spectrum disorders (65).
The illness of our patient followed two stages that imperceptibly merged into each other, namely, the change in personality and the catatonic stupor. We suggest that these stages mirrored the progression of the underlying cerebral degeneration. Thus, during the early years, she became socially disinhibited and aggressive, and her speech became increasingly economic and meaningless. Along the same period, her gait deteriorated and she became incontinent. This stage was supposedly symptomatic of the frontotemporal degeneration proper (66). During the later stages, which lasted several months, she gradually entered a state of catatonic stupor that possibly corresponded to the progression of degeneration to the parietal lobes (67). Taken together, we believe that the progression of degeneration to the parietal lobes overcame the initial disinhibitory effects of the earlier frontotemporal injury and eventually produced a net imbalance toward the avoidance pole of the approach-avoidance continuum (68), of which catatonic stupor represents the maximum behavioral expression.
Conclusion
Catatonic stupor in the elderly may be the sole or main symptom of degenerative dementia, especially FTD. The diagnosis in such cases may be delayed when it falls into this no man's land that neurologists and psychiatrists believe to be the province of the other. The scarcity of practitioners who are skilled at both neurology and psychiatry may unwittingly relegate many patients to a sort of “specialties limbo.” Clearly, there is an urgent need to revive the practice of neuropsychiatry in the light of the technological achievements that have allowed the in vivo study of the neurological underpinnings of normal and abnormal human mind and behavior (69).
Data Availability Statement
The original contributions presented in the study are included in the article/Supplementary Material, further inquiries can be directed to the corresponding author.
Ethics Statement
Written informed consent was obtained from the individual's legal guardian/next of kin for the publication of any potentially identifiable images or data included in this article.
Author Contributions
All authors have contributed to the discussion and writing processes of this paper.
Conflict of Interest
The authors declare that the research was conducted in the absence of any commercial or financial relationships that could be construed as a potential conflict of interest.
Publisher's Note
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Acknowledgments
The authors are indebted to Mr. Jorge Baçal (in memoriam) and José Ricardo Pinheiro (Oswaldo Cruz Library, Rio de Janeiro) for digging up the old texts, and to Professor Omar da Rosa Santos (Gaffrée e Guinle Hospital, Federal University of the State of Rio de Janeiro) for his unrelenting institutional support. Andrew Norman Novaes kindly revised the English version of the ms.
Supplementary Material
The Supplementary Material for this article can be found online at: https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fneur.2021.798264/full#supplementary-material
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Keywords: abulia minor, akinetic mutism, catatonia, catatonic stupor, frontotemporal dementia (FTD), hypersexuality, Pick's disease
Citation: de França GC, Barreto HCdB, Paranhos T, Nunes JC and de Oliveira-Souza R (2022) Case Report: Catatonic Stupor in Behavioral Variant Frontotemporal Dementia. Front. Neurol. 12:798264. doi: 10.3389/fneur.2021.798264
Received: 19 October 2021; Accepted: 21 December 2021;
Published: 18 January 2022.
Edited by:
Sebastian Walther, University of Bern, SwitzerlandReviewed by:
Gabor Ungvari, University of Notre Dame Australia, AustraliaJordi Serra-Mestres, Cardinal Clinic, United Kingdom
Copyright © 2022 de França, Barreto, Paranhos, Nunes and de Oliveira-Souza. This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY). The use, distribution or reproduction in other forums is permitted, provided the original author(s) and the copyright owner(s) are credited and that the original publication in this journal is cited, in accordance with accepted academic practice. No use, distribution or reproduction is permitted which does not comply with these terms.
*Correspondence: Ricardo de Oliveira-Souza, rdeoliveira@gmail.com