Causes of stupor
Possible causes of stupor include:
- mental illness;
- diseases of the nervous system.
This condition can be a consequence of severe depression and prolonged psychosis, neuroses, and schizophrenia. It also develops as a result of encephalopathies and brain damage due to infectious diseases, intoxication and trauma.
Impressionable and emotionally unstable people often fall into a stupor after they experience some kind of shock or become witnesses or participants in emergency incidents.
Note! Knowing the reasons for the development of stupor, you can reduce the likelihood of developing this condition to a minimum. To do this, it is necessary to avoid stress and situations that traumatize the psyche, as well as promptly treat mental and neurological diseases
Causes
There are many similarities and many differences between psychiatric and general stupor: their clinical picture seems very similar, but the cause and outcomes can be completely different.
In psychiatry, stupor develops as one of the types of mental disorders; its development can be caused by:
- stressful situations;
- psychotraumatic situations;
- diseases of the nervous system;
- character traits.
Most often, such a condition as stupor develops in people who are emotionally unstable, impressionable, prone to exaggerating events, who have experienced severe nervous shock, or who have become a participant or witness to some frightening events (catastrophe, accident, violence). A stuporous state can develop in people with diseases of the nervous system, depression, schizophrenia or neurosis.
Damage to brain cells during trauma, severe infectious diseases, and intoxication causes a cascade of reactions that successively causes stupor, stupor, and coma.
These stages of impaired consciousness differ from each other in the severity of the patient’s condition. So, with a disorder such as stupor, the patient reacts to strong stimuli, with certain efforts comes into contact with others and performs some actions.
With stupor, the reaction only to painful stimuli persists; it is almost impossible to get out of this state on your own, and if the patient is not given help, his condition will worsen and he will develop a coma. Coma is a severe disorder of consciousness in which the patient does not respond to external stimuli, including pain. This condition is considered borderline and it is impossible to bring the patient back to life without intensive medical care.
Stupor-stupor-coma in intensive care practice
In resuscitation, stupor is one of the emergency conditions with depression of consciousness preceding stupor and coma.
The differences between stuporous, soporous and comatose states manifest themselves in the depth of the patient’s disturbance of consciousness:
- Stupor : drowsiness, disorientation in place and time are noted. The condition resembles alcohol intoxication, the reaction to external irritations is reduced. The patient answers questions slowly and sluggishly, often immediately falling asleep and falling into a stupor.
- Stupor : the patient is unconscious, reacts only to strong stimuli (prick, shout, shaking), responding with purposeful actions. The condition resembles deep sleep.
- Superficial coma : the patient is unconscious and responds to strong painful stimuli with erratic actions.
- Deep coma : the patient is unconscious, there is no reaction to any external stimuli.
Stupor, stupor or coma can occur due to a number of diseases, such as infections of the brain and its membranes, acute cerebrovascular accidents, diabetes mellitus, liver and kidney diseases, severe traumatic brain injuries, acute poisoning, overdose of drugs, alcohol, some medicines, etc.
As a result, the state of stupor can occur in the practice of doctors of various specializations: neurologists, infectious disease specialists, endocrinologists, general practitioners, etc.
Causes of stuporous state
If we consider all the underlying causes of stupor, we can conclude: this is nothing more than capitulation to danger. Scientists believe that it is human nature to respond to danger in one of two possible ways, namely:
- Fight.
- Run.
Often danger leaves us no time to think (otherwise we would try to avoid it) and our subconscious mind independently and instantly sends a signal to our body exactly what it needs to do. But there are situations when neither flight nor fight will help; the simplest example is a passenger in a falling plane.
Stupor is a sentence that an individual has passed on himself. The body capitulates to a danger that can neither be avoided nor reduced, and it is the experience of fatal helplessness that causes this state.
But it happens that a person falls into a stupor, as they say, out of nowhere. The situation that led to it is neither particularly traumatic for the psyche nor dangerous for physical health. Here past experience can play a cruel joke on us.
In any situation, a person makes a decision on how to act in a given situation, guided by:
- intuition;
- your feelings;
- based on past experience.
Moreover, this decision is often made unconsciously and many times a day, automatically and instantly.
will fall into a stupor.
This is, of course, a joke, but it perfectly demonstrates that in those cases when we acted in a situation familiar to us and received a result that did not correspond to our past experience, we end up with stupor. Although not something that deserves hospitalization or an urgent visit to a psychiatrist, it is also a stuporous state.
Types of stupor and its symptoms
Before moving on, let's take a quick look at the types of stupor and give them a very brief description. So, there is a stupor:
- Akinetic. This condition is characterized by maintaining the body position in one position for a long time and resisting its change.
- Apathetic. It is characterized by a lack of motivation for any activity, both motor and mental, disorientation, and paucity of experiences.
- Affective, depressive, melancholic stupor. It is observed with deep depression and is usually accompanied by a mournful expression on the face and posture.
- Hallucinatory or hallucinatory-paranoid stupor is accompanied by hallucinations, either auditory or visual.
- Catatonic. It is a manifestation of catatonic syndrome and is characterized by passive negativism or waxy flexibility, and in the most extreme manifestation – muscle numbness in the fetal position.
- Manic. Combined with the patient's extremely agitated mood.
- Negativistic. In this state, the patient is in a daze, but resists attempts at external influence.
- Effective or empty. There are no other psychopathological disorders.
There are conditions that are clearly caused by traumatic experiences:
- Hysterical, psychogenic, pseudocatatonic, emotional stupor occurs as a result of severe mental trauma, for example, the loss of a loved one, being in a war zone, captivity, rape.
- Post-shock. Occurs after a natural or man-made disaster: fire, tsunami, car accident, etc.
Stupor can be a symptom or consequence of a mental illness or severe brain damage, either organic, chemical or infectious:
- Receptor. Occurs against the background of schizophrenic delirium.
- Exogenous. This condition occurs against the background of toxic or infectious damage to the brain.
- Epileptic. Brief stupor lasting from several hours to several days in epileptics.
- Stupor, apparent or Westphalian pseudostupor, occurs against the background of severe mental disorders and is directly associated with them.
Treatment of stupor
Many people are concerned about the question: “how to get out of the stupor”? Naturally, only specialists - psychotherapists and psychologists - can help with this. However, you should still know how to help a loved one or someone around you if signs become noticeable that the subject is about to fall into a stupor or has already entered such a state and needs help.
So, first of all, massage of special points located exactly in the middle above the pupils, equidistant from the eyebrow arches and hairline, will help relieve tension. These points should be massaged using the pads of the index finger and thumb. In addition, it is recommended to try to provoke strong emotions in an individual in a stuporous state, no matter positive or negative (preferably negative). For example, you can slap someone in the face.
It can help to get out of the stupor by bending the individual’s fingers and pressing them forcefully against the palms, while the thumbs remain straight. So, the answer to the question: “how to get out of a stupor” is hidden in the emotional shake-up of the body and the synchronization of the breathing of the sufferer with the subject helping him. For this purpose, you can put your hand on the chest of an individual who has fallen into a stupor and adjust to his breathing pace.
In case of stupor, emergency care is limited to ensuring the safety of subjects and preventing dangerous actions on their part. For example, in a catatonic stuporous state, emergency assistance will consist of readiness to stop unexpected impulsive agitation.
In case of depressive stupor - preventing the possibility of unexpected development of depressive agitation with a focus on suicide, as well as eliminating food refusal. In addition, you need to take into account that stupor can suddenly give way to excitement.
Treatment often occurs in an inpatient setting. Barbamyl-caffeine disinhibition is used. Thanks to which it is possible to detect the characteristics of the patient’s experiences and anxieties, which helps to determine the nature of the stuporous state. This disinhibition is also a therapeutic method that helps with persistent food refusal.
A stuporous state that occurs against the background of severe somatic illnesses requires treatment of the underlying disease.
For stupor accompanied by hallucinations and delusions, Stelazine and Trisedal are used as well as in the treatment of hallucinatory and delusional states. In case of a depressive stuporous state, disinhibition is also carried out and Melipramin is used up to 300 mg per day orally or intramuscularly. For a psychogenic stuporous state - Diazepam up to 30 mg per day orally or intramuscularly, Elennium or Phenazepam.
Signs of a soporous state
- A person with stupor seems to be sleeping, but may have some reaction to a strong irritant. If a sharp sound occurs, the patient’s eyes react – they open, but do not look for the source.
- If you press on the nail, the patient will withdraw his hand. A strong negative reaction may occur to the injection, but it is quite short-lived. The patient may even begin to swear or fight.
- If you conduct a general examination, you will notice decreased muscle tone and suppressed deep reflexes. There may be pyramidal signs due to decreased central motor neuron input.
- Focal neurological symptoms may also be observed in parallel, which will indicate local damage to structures and areas of the brain.
- If the stuporous state was provoked by hemorrhage inside the skull, then stiffness of the neck muscles and other meningeal symptoms will be noted. There may also be cramps and muscle twitching. Read more about the symptoms and treatment of cerebral hemorrhage.
- The patient may also experience hyperkinetic stupor - the patient mutters something to himself, makes unfocused movements.
Level of consciousness during stupor
As for the consciousness in such a situation, the patient is quite cloudy, and he is not able to answer any questions, the reaction is short-lived even to strong stimuli.
Symptoms of stupor
It is often difficult to determine the state of a dissociative disorder by external signs; examination with specialized equipment and hospital stay are necessary.
Doctors monitor the patient’s pulse and breathing, indicators during sleep and wakefulness, also summarize all the results and come to a final diagnosis. A symptom of such a pathology may be an inadequate reaction to an external stimulus, noise, light, pain, etc.
Symptoms of dissociative stupor:
- the patient freezes and does not respond to external stimuli;
- lack of speech and feedback;
- there are no spontaneous movements;
- impaired eye coordination;
- inadequate reaction to touch and pain.
Only thanks to specialized equipment can it be determined that a person is awake and understands where he is and what is happening to him.
With emotional or psychogenic stupor, the patient looks inhibited and may have affective tension.
Stupor causes, methods of diagnosis and treatment
Stupor is a physical and mental disorder expressed in the form of numbness, as well as partial or complete immobility. Most often accompanied by mutism - the inability or unwillingness to contact others with complete preservation of thinking and speech abilities. A symptom is a person’s condition in which he does not react to external stimuli, does not experience hunger, temperature changes, pain or other sensations.
When diagnosing stupor, the presence or absence of a state of immobility in the patient, a decrease or absence of reaction to external stimuli is taken into account. Also, when making a diagnosis, it is necessary to take into account whether the patient has recently suffered a stressful event.
Types of catatonia
Two different manifestations of motor activity disorders are observed in this condition:
- catatonic stupor;
- catatonic excitement.
Catatonic stupor
Stupor occurs due to a traumatic mental event. Stupor, along with amnesia, identity disorder, derealization, depersonalization and other pathologies, is included in the group of dissociative disorders. These conditions develop after severe stressful situations and are accompanied by clouding of reason and the development of other psychopathological processes.
A short-term stupor can last for seconds, and this state occurs quite often; in everyday situations, many freeze in place from horror. Such short-term catatonic stupor does not require treatment. Longer-term motor activity disorders are considered to be quite rare deviations. Dissociative disorders occur during natural disasters, industrial disasters and other extensive destruction. Movement disorders are treated by psychiatrists, who should be contacted in such cases.
Catatonic stupor is divided into three types:
- Cataleptic, it is also called a disorder with waxy flexibility. The patient stops for a long time and freezes in a constant position, which can be completely uncomfortable for him. It is noteworthy that with complete non-reaction to human words spoken in a full voice, the patient may show a reaction to words spoken in a whisper. Sometimes the loosening of the bonds of stupor can occur at night.
- Negativistic stupor is characterized by the same symptoms as in the previous case, but the patient tries in every way to prevent the doctors from changing his position.
- Stupor with numbness is the most inhibited, with a strong motor stop, during which there is a significant increase in muscle tone. The patient is typically in the fetal position; the disorder may change to pathetic or impulsive agitation.
Catatonic agitation
This type of pathology also has several manifestations:
- The pathetic excited state gradually gains momentum, while the patient is distinguished by high spirits and cheerful behavior. After some time, excitement increases, pathetic and exalted phrases appear in speech, and echolalia slips through. In the final version, the pathology acquires a foolish mood, manifests itself in aimless behavior with complete preservation of consciousness, the patient can somersault and exhibit childish behavior. The patient is aware of his inappropriate behavior and is sincerely perplexed about what is happening to him.
- The impulsive form of excitement flares up suddenly, the main characteristic features are cruelty, speed and destruction of surrounding things and objects. Often there is aimless, repeated and persistent muttering or shouting of words and phrases, and the patient repeats some actions several times. A person crawls, spits, attacks someone, imitates the poses and actions of other people. In this condition, the patient can pose a significant danger to surrounding people or animals.
- Silent agitation is characterized by sudden, senseless aggression that is directed at other people. During such silent hatred, the patient causes severe injury and damage to himself and others, and violently resists. This behavior refers to the highest manifestation of impulse excitation.
Treatment of stuporous conditions
Treatment of stupor should be carried out in a hospital. In all cases, it is necessarily carried out against the background of therapy for the underlying disease.
If the diagnosis is unclear, additional examinations may be required to clarify it (EEG, computed tomography, laboratory tests, etc.)
This is also important in cases where there is a need to determine whether stupor is the result of somatic or mental illness
Treatment of the underlying disease should be quite intensive, taking into account the seriousness of the condition. At the same time, this is a prevention of relapses of stupor in the future. Of course, the range of drugs may be different: for example, antipsychotics if a patient has schizophrenia, anticonvulsants for epilepsy, antidepressants for depression, etc.
For functional pathologies (hysteria, stress, neuroses, etc.), psychotherapy can have a good effect.
Along with this, it is necessary to use drugs that disinhibit and stimulate the activity of the central nervous system. For these purposes, activating agents and psychostimulants (caffeine, Frenolone, Sidnocarb, etc.) are successfully used. As an additional therapy, the prescription of nootropic drugs (Piracetam, Encephabol, Phenotropil, etc.) can be considered appropriate.
In a psychiatric hospital, barbamyl-caffeine disinhibition is successfully used to treat many types of stupor (catatonic, depressive, etc.): intravenous administration of 1-2 ml of a 20% caffeine solution, and after 3-5 minutes 5-10 ml 5 % barbamyl solution. This method is also effective when patients refuse to eat.
For catatonic stupor, intramuscular administration of Frenolone at a dose of 5-15 mg per day is also used. For hallucinatory stupor, neuroleptics are used - Mazeptil, Triftazin, Haloperidol, etc. In the treatment of emotional, apathetic, hysterical stupor, tranquilizers - Diazepam, Phenazepam, etc. can be used.
In general, the specific choice of drugs and dosage are determined by the attending physician, based on the form of the disease and the severity of the patient’s condition.
Some of the possible complications of stupor have been mentioned above. In particular, emotional stupor can lead to the development of panic neurosis and depression.
Depressive, catatonic and epileptic forms of stupor can suddenly turn into a state of agitation with aggressive actions towards oneself and others. Stupor due to somatic diseases can be complicated by transition to stupor and coma.
Many of these conditions pose a threat not only to the health, but also to the life of the patient, and are also dangerous to others, which makes intensive treatment for stupor mandatory.
Treatment for stupor
In a hospital setting, thanks to barbamyl-caffeine disinhibition, it is possible to identify the characteristics of the patient’s experiences and thereby determine the nature of the stupor. It also serves as a method of treatment and helps with persistent refusal to eat. At the beginning, 1-2 ml of a 20% caffeine solution is administered, and after 3-5 minutes, 5-10 ml of a 510% barbamyl solution is administered slowly intravenously, monitoring the patient’s condition, and at the first signs of disinhibition, the infusion is stopped so as not to exceed the individual disinhibition dose for this patient and do not induce normal sleep. The administration of barbamyl is stopped at the moment when the patient opens his eyes or when facial, motor or vegetative reactions (in the form of paleness or redness of the face, sweating, etc.) begin to appear; in this case, it is necessary to stimulate the patient’s disinhibition in every possible way: contact him with questions, slow him down, lightly pat on the cheek, etc.
In a psychiatric hospital, catatonic stupor is treated with intramuscular administration of frenolone at a dose of 5-15 mg/day; for lucid stupor, mazeptil is prescribed orally up to 60 mg/day; Barbamilcaffeine disinhibition is also effective. The psychostimulant sydnocarb up to 30-50 mg/day orally is also effective. For stupor with delusions and hallucinations, stelazine (triftazine), haloperidol, and trisedal are used according to the same principles as the treatment of delusional and hallucinatory states.
For depressive stupor, barbamyl-caffeine disinhibition is carried out, melipramine is used up to 200-300 mg/day orally or intramuscularly. For psychogenic stupor, use diazepam (Seduxen, Relanium) up to 30 mg/day orally, preferably intramuscularly; elennium up to 50 mg/day orally, preferably intramuscularly; phenazepam - 3-5 mg/day orally. Stupor in severe somatic diseases requires intensive treatment of the underlying disease. Hospitalization is necessary in a psychiatric hospital for all types of stupor, except for somatogenic stupor, the treatment of which is carried out in the same department where the patient is diagnosed with a somatic disease.
What are the symptoms of stupor?
A person who is in a stupor can be disturbed or awakened by vigorous stimulation. It may be considered unconscious, but may be partially responsive to stimuli. Stupor differs from coma in that a person in a coma cannot be awakened or stimulated at all.
Stupor may cause the following physical symptoms in addition to mental symptoms:
- abnormal breathing, where breathing is too slow or fast
- muscles are contracted in an abnormal way
- pupils that are wider or narrower than normal
- pupils that do not respond or change when exposed to light
There may be other disease-specific symptoms associated with stupor.
How to get out of the stupor?
Experts can help you get out of depression, especially if it’s a severe case. However, loved ones who note that a person is entering a stupor or is already in this state can also help get out of it:
- Massage the points on the face located in the middle of the eyes at an equal distance from the eyebrows and hair.
- Cause strong positive or negative emotions (for example, slapping).
- Bend your fingers towards your palms with force, without touching your thumbs.
While a person is in a stupor, you should ensure his safety: change the environment, give him food, surround him with loved ones, etc.
Severe cases of stupor are treated in a hospital with the help of barbamyl-caffeine disinhibition. Delusions and hallucinations are eliminated with Stelazine and Trisedal. Depression is eliminated with Melipramine.
Stupor
Stupor
(from Latin stupor “numbness, stupor”) - in psychiatry, one of the types of movement disorder, which is complete immobility with mutism and weakened reactions to irritation, including pain. There are various types of stuporous states: catatonic, reactive, depressive stupor. Catatonic stupor is the most common; it develops as a manifestation of the catatonic syndrome and is characterized by passive negativism or waxy flexibility or (in the most severe form) severe muscle hypertension with numbness of the patient in a pose with bent limbs.
Being in a stupor, patients do not come into contact with others, do not react to current events, various inconveniences, noise, wet and dirty bed. They may not move if there is a fire, earthquake or some other extreme event. Patients usually lie in one position, the muscles are tense, the tension often begins with the masticatory muscles, then goes down to the neck, and later spreads to the back, arms and legs. In this state, there is no emotional or pupillary response to pain. Bumke's syndrome—dilation of the pupils in response to pain—is absent.
What is stupor?
Stupor in psychiatry is understood as a disorder of motor function. Outwardly, it looks like numbness. This condition manifests itself in total immobility, which is combined with mutism (muteness or complete refusal of communication). A person practically does not react to external stimuli.
If a person exhibits a psychological stupor of a painful nature, then it is marked by a lack of response to surrounding events. A person does not respond to environmental stimuli, such as cold or noise. Stupor can last for a very long time, which is why the person does not eat, drink, or speak.
Stupor can be the final state of such phenomena as:
- Deep depression.
- Severe stress.
- Personality disorder.
- Fright.
Externally, stupor can take various bizarre forms. Some can lie motionless for days and even weeks, while taking one position. Others may stand facing the wall or cover their head with a blanket, not changing their position until someone forcibly changes it.
Stupor has varying degrees of manifestation. In a mild form, it can manifest itself in a healthy person in the form of stupor and numbness. This can happen at a time of strong excitement or anxiety. In psychiatry we usually talk about an extreme degree of stupor, when a person is no longer able to realize his condition and control himself.
A healthy person can come out of a stuporous state on his own. In severe forms of the disease, you cannot do without the help of a psychiatrist.
Questions and answers
Question:
Good day. I am 21 years old. When I start communicating with someone, I feel some kind of stupor, I can’t say anything, I can’t carry on a conversation, there’s some kind of mess in my head. If I want to tell something, I often forget the words and get lost. I’m afraid to stay with a person one-on-one, I think that he will be bored with me. In the company of friends, all I do is listen, although when there is a conversation about something, I understand that I can tell a lot, express my opinion . Sometimes I think that I am inattentive and “dumb”. I myself am interested in psychology, football, technology, but when these topics are discussed, I am still afraid to say something. It feels like a cockroach is sitting in your head and doesn’t allow you to get used to the information and express yourself competently. The problem started back in school, when conflicts with classmates began, then the situation improved a little, but I became a boring person who is often silent, and when he wants to say something, he blurts out some nonsense, but only then do I realize it. Tell me what could be the problem?
Answer: The problem is the fear of other people’s assessment of their statements, actions, and deeds. Fears inhibit communication, and this “inhibition” makes one feel ashamed. Shame is an affective feeling; it practically paralyzes both the thinking and the active processes. Anger at oneself and lack of self-acceptance appear. Perhaps this is roughly what is happening to you. You might want to take individual or group classes to reduce your fears and discover that you are not the only one, many experience similar feelings. Then it will be easier to accept yourself and cope with your fears.
Question:
When the teacher asks something, I can’t say anything, because it’s like there’s some kind of stupor. I speak normally with my friends, no problem. It also happens that in a minibus I have to tell them to stop at the bus stop, but I can’t say a word, or in a store. How to deal with this?
Answer: It seems to me that the fear of speaking appears in you in situations where you do not feel that you are on an equal footing with the interlocutor (as happens with friends: you are on the same level with them). In frightening situations, there is a feeling that you should be evaluated (by the teacher or people on the minibus). Perhaps this fear of being assessed (most likely, a low assessment) is what causes stupor: it’s better not to say anything than to “blurt something stupid” and embarrass yourself. In such cases (if this is your case, of course) you can work with self-esteem, self-acceptance - non-judgmental. Maybe you are too hard on yourself? In addition, there are a lot of tricks that, for example, speakers use when speaking in front of a large audience. The fact is that the fear of public speaking is inherent in a huge number of people. To calm down before going out in public, speakers use different things: breathing (several deep breaths, exhalations, for example), visualization (imagine that you are among friends - just chatting carefree). There are special exercises to help improve diction, including for moments when your throat gets dry. You can combine the practice of such exercises and work to increase self-esteem and self-confidence.
Causes
The most common cause of catatonic syndrome is a mental disorder, but only a few of them can produce similar symptoms. The affective spectrum of pathomanifestations is quite extensive, but it is the catatonic syndrome that may be characteristic of mania, and this is not a typical form of mania, which requires a very detailed investigation and diagnosis. The classic catatonic syndrome is catatonic schizophrenia. With it, this disorder is most widespread and has a fairly typical course.
Severe forms of PTSD also have catatonic inclusions, but for them this is not a pathognomonic syndrome. Postpartum mental spectrum disorders can often reach the level of psychotic symptoms, including catatonic inclusions. Hysteria often imitates a large number of disorders that have very serious symptoms, and this pathology is no exception to the list of diseases, the symptoms of which are often used by the hysterical group of disorders. Autism is classified as part of the schizophrenia spectrum according to some sources, and it can also become the root cause of the described disease.
Catatonic syndrome in children is often provoked by autistic disorders. In children, it is provoked by all autism spectrum disorders. Various etiological disorders in children also become predictors of this syndrome. Neurological diseases are very close to mental disorders, which is why almost each of them can provoke this syndrome.
Tourette's syndrome, manifested by violent, uncontrolled screams, actions, and grimaces, can be accompanied by catatonic syndrome, as well as temporal lobe epilepsy, which even has an alter term - ictal catatonia. TBI and traumatic lesions leading to residual brain effects often provoke severe catatonic syndromes, especially with incorrect or absent treatment.
Cancerous lesions, especially those with a specific brain localization, very often provoke catatonic syndrome, and there are many oncological pathologies that provoke this symptomatology. Not only can the primary tumor be localized in the brain tissue, quite often a metastatic lesion becomes even more dangerous when it is carried into the brain tissue by the bloodstream. Depending on the proportion affected by these tumor tissues, a variety of productive symptoms may appear, including catatonic syndrome. Damage to the thalamus, postencephalic syndrome, is dangerous in this regard. Often, catatonic manifestations occur when the functioning of the globus pallidus, as well as the vertex and frontal part of the brain is disrupted.
Somatic pathologies also become very active predictors of catatonic syndrome, especially when the pathology is severe or even incurable. This happens with hematological pathologies, in particular platelet purpura. Severe disorders with metabolic disorders, such as endocrinopathies, with hyponatremia, Wilson's pathology, very often provoke this disease. Also, Tay Sachs disease and endocrinological disorders, either in the direction of hyperfunction or in the direction of hypofunction, may be involved in the development of pathology. As for thyroid pathology and adrenalism, such dysfunctions quite often manifest themselves as catatonic syndrome with severe decompensation.
Viral infections, especially AIDS, can cause this syndrome in the structure of brain damage. Also, hypovitaminosis B12 and typhoid infection are pathognomonic for this disorder. Autoimmune pathologies, especially those with damage to the blood vessels of the brain, are also predictors of this syndrome.
Paraneoplastic syndrome, as a manifestation of tumor-volitional pathology, various physical factors, such as lack of oxygen, heat constriction, poisoning with toxins and lead, often provokes catatonic syndrome. In addition, it can be caused by drug use, as well as antipsychotic drugs, antibiotics and some groups of anticonvulsants.