About this Research Topic
While clinical presentation and associated disorders are broadly comparable to that found in adults, the presence of an associated developmental disorder or an underlying organic condition should be carefully investigated in children and adolescents, in order to tailor the therapies to the patients. Recent advances in childhood and adolescent catatonia have majorly improved our understanding and may finally help to reduce the morbidity of this syndrome. A lot of work remains to be done to better understand the mechanisms behind catatonic symptoms; however, we believe that a focus on motor planning/execution provides a valuable research framework. Therefore there is a crucial need for publications tackling the following issues. We welcome different types of papers on the topic—including empirical studies, review papers, theoretical contributions, and opinion articles— which could help providing new data (epidemiology, the neurobiology, and the genetics), new physiopathological concepts and new diagnostic and therapeutic approaches, in order to answer some of the issue described below and to elucidate the complexity of the catatonic syndrome in youths.
- A better understanding of the epidemiology, the neurobiology, the physiopathology pathways and the genetics factors involved in pediatric catatonia;
- Phenotyping the specifics catatonic features depending on the etiology (organic versus psychiatric, or among different psychiatric diagnoses);
- Defining possible factors of severity in terms of clinical features, relapses, and resistance to treatment;
- Pursuing the classification of new underlying organic and psychiatric conditions associated with catatonia;
- Standardization of the symptomatic treatment with benzodiazepine and ECT, through controlled studies;
- Reporting the benefits and tolerance of new medications such as NMDA antagonist;
- Standardization of the etiological treatment with the development of diagnosis and treatment algorithms (e.g: causality assessment score, CAUS).
Keywords: Catatonia, Diagnosis, Etiology, Phenotyping, Treatment
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