Acute psychosis: Difference between revisions

(Created page with "==Background== *Caused by many psychiatric and medical conditions *Examples: schizophrenia, mania ==Clinical Presentation== *Agitation *Restlessness *Irritability *Decreased a...")
 
(Expand with concise EM-focused content: red flags for organic cause, pharmacologic management options, B52 cocktail)
 
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==Background==
==Background==
*Caused by many psychiatric and medical conditions
*Loss of contact with reality characterized by hallucinations, delusions, and/or disordered thinking
*Examples: schizophrenia, mania
*'''EM priority:''' Rule out medical (organic) causes before attributing to primary psychiatric illness
==Clinical Presentation==
*First-episode psychosis, age >40 onset, or atypical features should always prompt thorough medical workup
*Agitation
*Causes: schizophrenia, bipolar disorder, substance intoxication/withdrawal, medical illness (infection, metabolic, neurologic, endocrine)
*Restlessness
 
*Irritability
==Clinical Features==
*[[Hallucinations]] (auditory most common in psychiatric; visual more suggestive of organic cause)
*Delusions (paranoid, persecutory, grandiose)
*Disorganized speech or behavior
*[[Agitation]], restlessness, irritability
*Decreased attention
*Decreased attention
*innappropriate or hostile behaviors
*Inappropriate or hostile behaviors
*+/- additional features of underlying pathology (signs of intoxication/withdrawal, trauma, focal neurologic deficits)
 
===Red Flags Suggesting Medical Cause===
*Age >40 with no psychiatric history
*Acute onset (hours to days)
*Visual hallucinations predominant
*[[Altered mental status]], clouding of consciousness (suggests [[delirium]])
*Vital sign abnormalities (fever, tachycardia, hypertension)
*Focal neurologic findings
*Recent medication changes or new substances
 
==Differential Diagnosis==
==Differential Diagnosis==
see [[Altered mental status]]
{{AMS DDX}}
==Diagnosis==
{{Psychiatric Disorders with Psychotic Symptoms DDX}}
*Vital signs
 
*Blood glucose
==Evaluation==
*signs or symptoms of intoxication or withdrawal
*Rule out organic causes before attributing to primary psychiatric illness
*signs of trauma
{{General ED Psychiatric Workup}}
*Consider: glucose, BMP, CBC, [[urine toxicology screen]], TSH, urinalysis, [[ECG]]
*CT head if: first episode, focal neuro findings, altered consciousness, age >40, head trauma
*LP if meningitis/encephalitis suspected (fever + AMS)
 
==Management==
==Management==
*Non-pharmacologic
*'''Treat underlying condition''' first
**Verbal de-escalation
*Ensure scene safety — de-escalation techniques before pharmacologic intervention
**Offer comforting items: blanket, meal, pillow, etc
{{General ED Psychiatric Management}}
**Quiet room
*'''Pharmacologic management of acute agitation:'''
**Physical restraints
**[[Haloperidol]] 5-10 mg IM + [[lorazepam]] 2 mg IM + [[diphenhydramine]] 50 mg IM (classic ''B52'' cocktail)
***should administer medications if restraints used (decreases restraint time)
**[[Olanzapine]] 10 mg IM (avoid with benzodiazepines — risk of respiratory depression)
*Pharmacologic: Goal is to calm pt without oversedation
**[[Midazolam]] 5 mg IM (fastest onset for severe agitation)
**No history of psychosis
**[[Ketamine]] 4-5 mg/kg IM for severe undifferentiated agitation
***Haloperidol 0.5mg-5mg + lorazepam 0.25-2mg (PO/IM/IV)
*Avoid restraints when possible; use least restrictive measures
***Consider adding benztropine 0.5-2mg OR diphenhydramine 25-50mg (PO/IV/IM)
 
****reduces dystonia or EPS
***Consider risperidone 0.5-2mg PO OR olanzapine 2.5-20mg (PO/IM/SL) OR ziprasidone 10-20mg IM
==Disposition==
==Disposition==
*Depends on underlying cause
*'''Admit/psychiatric hold:''' first psychotic episode, suicidal/homicidal ideation, unable to care for self, poor support system
*'''Discharge:''' known psychiatric disorder with exacerbation, medically cleared, safe disposition plan, psychiatry follow-up


==See Also==
==See Also==
 
*[[Agitated or combative patient]]
==External Links==
*[[Altered mental status]]
*[[Agitated delirium]]
*[[Hallucinations]]
*[[Delirium]]


==References==
==References==
<references/>
<references/>
[[Category:Psychiatry]]

Latest revision as of 01:27, 21 March 2026

Background

  • Loss of contact with reality characterized by hallucinations, delusions, and/or disordered thinking
  • EM priority: Rule out medical (organic) causes before attributing to primary psychiatric illness
  • First-episode psychosis, age >40 onset, or atypical features should always prompt thorough medical workup
  • Causes: schizophrenia, bipolar disorder, substance intoxication/withdrawal, medical illness (infection, metabolic, neurologic, endocrine)

Clinical Features

  • Hallucinations (auditory most common in psychiatric; visual more suggestive of organic cause)
  • Delusions (paranoid, persecutory, grandiose)
  • Disorganized speech or behavior
  • Agitation, restlessness, irritability
  • Decreased attention
  • Inappropriate or hostile behaviors
  • +/- additional features of underlying pathology (signs of intoxication/withdrawal, trauma, focal neurologic deficits)

Red Flags Suggesting Medical Cause

  • Age >40 with no psychiatric history
  • Acute onset (hours to days)
  • Visual hallucinations predominant
  • Altered mental status, clouding of consciousness (suggests delirium)
  • Vital sign abnormalities (fever, tachycardia, hypertension)
  • Focal neurologic findings
  • Recent medication changes or new substances

Differential Diagnosis

Altered mental status

Diffuse brain dysfunction

Primary CNS disease or trauma

Psychiatric

Psychiatric Disorders with Psychotic Symptoms

Evaluation

  • Rule out organic causes before attributing to primary psychiatric illness

General ED Psychiatric Workup

Management

  • Treat underlying condition first
  • Ensure scene safety — de-escalation techniques before pharmacologic intervention

General ED Psychiatric Management

Disposition

  • Depends on underlying cause
  • Admit/psychiatric hold: first psychotic episode, suicidal/homicidal ideation, unable to care for self, poor support system
  • Discharge: known psychiatric disorder with exacerbation, medically cleared, safe disposition plan, psychiatry follow-up

See Also

References