Syndrome Catatonic Secondary

Secondary catatonic syndrome is a serious mental illness that is characterized by severe mental disorders. This is a rare disease, but it can be fatal if not treated promptly and correctly.

Catatonic secondary syndrome was first described by German psychiatrist Ernst Kraepelin in 1893. He describes the disease as a complication of catatonia, a better-known disorder in which patients live in a world of their own imagination and are unresponsive to external stimuli. However, catatonic syndrome is not a direct consequence of catatonia and requires separate treatment.

Symptoms of catatonic secondary syndrome include motor disturbances, changes in mood, voice and thinking, as well as problems with memory and motor coordination. Patients with this disease may experience hallucinations, nightmares and delusions, which are often related to their mental state.

Treatment of catatonic secondary therapy syndrome should be comprehensive and include drug therapy, psychotherapy, and sometimes even surgery if necessary. In most cases, treatment begins with antipsychotic medications such as haloperidol or risperidone, which reduce symptoms of the disorder. Patients may also be treated with antipsychotics, antidepressants



Catatonic syndrome primary and secondary

Catatonic diseases are characterized by the presence of stereotypical disorders of motor skills and thinking that are not typical for the normal state, as well as peculiar speech behavior (mutism, echolalia, pathological impulsiveness of speech). The main group of syndromes is catatonic stupor, agitation, mental automatisms, and they constitute the essence of catatonic schizophrenia. The syndrome is characterized by a long course and can be a persistent and unrealistic condition of the patient for many years. Next, the secondary catatonic syndrome will be discussed. Such conditions arise in exogenous-organic and infectious psychoses, acute and prolonged traumatic psychoses. Common symptoms, including catatonic symptoms, are called secondary catatonic syndrome (SCS). The syndrome of secondary catatonic stupor is most often observed in postencephalitic parkinsonism and corsa