DISPOSITION
Admission Criteria
- Danger to self
- Danger to others
- Severely disabled and unable to care for self/protect self in community
- Follow commitment process for your state
Discharge Criteria
- Patients may be discharged after medical and psychiatric evaluation if they:
- Can care for themselves adequately
and
- The risk of harm to self or others is assessed to be safely manageable in a less-restrictive alternative, such as a partial hospital, a crisis stabilization/observation unit, or outpatient treatment
Issues for Referral
- Patient with acute psychiatric illness who does not meet the criteria for hospitalization usually requires 1 or more of the following:
- Crisis stabilization or observation unit
- Partial hospitalization, day program, or intensive outpatient program referral
- Psychiatrist and/or therapist follow-up appointment within 3–5 days
- Crisis Line phone number
- Patient may need to call insurer for list of or referral to outpatient providers covered by his or her insurance and may need a prior authorization
FOLLOW-UP
FOLLOW-UP RECOMMENDATIONS
Patient instructed to return to ED if feels unsafe, has increasing suicidal/homicidal thoughts, or other symptoms worsen
PEARLS AND PITFALLS
- Psychiatric civil commitment involves involuntary hospitalization due to mental illness and 1 of the following:
- Substantial risk of harm to self
- Substantial risk of harm to others
- Inability to care for/protect self
- The details vary by state, so you need to know the specifics of your jurisdiction:
- Mental retardation, antisocial behavior, organic causes such as dementia or delirium, and substance abuse may not qualify as a mental illness for which a person can be committed
- The definition of the 3rd criterion for commitment (“gravely disabled,” unable to care for or protect self, or in need of treatment) varies
- Time frames and procedures differ
- Need to complete thorough psychiatric and medical evaluation to evaluate causes of change in patient’s behavior
- Physician must weigh the ethical considerations inherent in involuntary hospitalization, balancing patient rights against the safety of patient or others.
ADDITIONAL READING
- Gutheil TG, Appelbaum PS.
Clinical Handbook of Psychiatry and the Law
. 4th ed. Philadelphia, PA: Lippincott Williams & Wilkins; 2007.
- Melton GB, Petrila J, Poythress NG, et al.
Psychological Evaluations for the Courts
. 3rd ed. New York, NY: The Guilford Press; 2007.
- Nordstrom K, Zun LS, Wilson MP, et al. Medical evaluation and triage of the agitated patient: Consensus statement of the american association for emergency psychiatry project Beta medical evaluation workgroup.
West J Emerg Med.
2012;13(1):3–10.
- Wilson MP, Pepper D, Currier GW, et al. The psychopharmacology of agitation: Consensus statement of the american association for emergency psychiatry project Beta psychopharmacology workgroup.
West J Emerg Med.
2012;13(1):26–34.
See Also (Topic, Algorithm, Electronic Media Element)
- Agitation
- Altered Mental Status
- Depression
- Psychosis, Acute
- Psychosis, Medical vs. Psychiatric
- Violence, Management of
CODES
ICD9
- 298.9 Unspecified psychosis
- 300.9 Unspecified nonpsychotic mental disorder
- V62.84 Suicidal ideation
ICD10
- F29 Unsp psychosis not due to a substance or known physiol cond
- F99 Mental disorder, not otherwise specified
- R45.851 Suicidal ideations
PSYCHOSIS, ACUTE
Celeste N. Nadal
•
Serena A. Fernandes
BASICS
DESCRIPTION
- Disorder of brain function characterized by loss of contact with reality, abnormal perceptions, disorganization of emotions, thought, and behavior
- Dopamine pathways are strongly implicated
- May be secondary to psychiatric or medical, nonpsychiatric causes
- Medical causes of psychosis can be secondary to focal or systemic medical insults, neurologic impairment, or pharmacologic agents
ETIOLOGY
Medical, Nonpsychiatric
- Neurologic disease:
- Head injury (history of)
- Dementias (Alzheimer, Lewy body)
- Cerebrovascular accident
- Seizures
- Space occupying lesions (neoplasm, malignancy, abscesses, cysts)
- Hydrocephalus
- Migraines
- Demyelinating diseases (multiple sclerosis)
- Neuropsychiatric disorders (Parkinson, Huntington, Wilson disease)
- Infectious disease:
- Any focal infection (UTI, PNA, cellulitis)
- HIV infection
- Neurosyphilis
- Lyme disease
- Encephalitis, meningitis or cerebritis:
- Bacterial (TB, Lyme)
- Viral (HSV, CMV, EBV)
- Fungal (Cryptococcus)
- Prion diseases
- Metabolic:
- Electrolyte imbalance
- Hypoxia
- Hypoglycemia
- Hypercarbia
- Porphyria
- Intoxication or withdrawal syndrome
- Organ failure:
- Liver (hepatic encephalopathy)
- Renal
- Cardiac (CHF, arrhythmias)
- Endocrine:
- Thyroid disease
- Parathyroid disease
- Cushing syndrome
- Addison disease
- Nutritional deficiencies:
- Niacin
- Thiamine
- Vitamin B
12
and folate
- Autoimmune disease:
- SLE
- Paraneoplastic syndrome
- Myasthenia gravis
Pharmacologic
- Medications:
- All medications can cause psychosis
- Sedative–hypnotics: Benzodiazepines (lorazepam, diazepam, alprazolam), barbiturates (butalbital), other (zolpidem)
- Anticholinergic and antihistaminergic agents (diphenhydramine, cimetidine)
- Steroids (prednisone)
- Antiepileptic agents
- Antiparkinsonian agents (amantadine, levodopa)
- Cardiovascular agents (digoxin, reserpine)
- Anti-infectious medications: Antibiotics (isoniazid, rifampin, fluoroquinolones, TMP/SMX), antivirals (oseltamivir, interferon), antiparasitics (metronidazole)
- Chemotherapeutic agents (vincristine)
- Muscle relaxants (dicyclomine, carisoprodol)
- Substances associated with intoxication:
- Alcohol
- Amphetamines
- Cocaine
- Opioids
- Hallucinogens
- Cannabis
- Sedative–hypnotics
- Other: LSD, MDMA, PCP, ketamine
- Substances associated with withdrawal:
- Alcohol and sedative–hypnotics
- Toxins (heavy metals, organophosphates, carbon monoxide)
Psychiatric
- Brief psychotic disorder:
- Abrupt onset, usually due to psychosocial stressors, lasting <1 mo
- Delusional disorder:
- Schizophreniform disorder:
- Schizophrenia
- Schizoaffective disorder
- Mood disorder with psychotic features
- Postpartum psychosis
DIAGNOSIS
SIGNS AND SYMPTOMS
- Delusions are fixed, false beliefs that are:
- Impervious to outside logic
- Often persecutory, religious, or somatic content
- Hallucinations:
- Sensory experiences in the absence of external stimuli
- Can involve any sensory modality; auditory and visual are most common.
- Thought disorder:
- Disorganized speech ranging from odd, idiosyncratic logic (loose associations) to incoherence (neologisms, word salad) or poverty of content
- Disorganized or catatonic behavior:
- Odd, stereotyped behavior (waxy flexibility, echopraxia)
- Negative symptoms:
- Flattened affect
- Apathy
- Anhedonia
- Social isolation
- Features suggesting a nonpsychiatric etiology:
- Sudden onset
- >30 yr old
- Fluctuating course
- Focal neurologic symptoms
- Abnormal vital signs
- Visual, olfactory, gustatory or tactile hallucinations
- Impairment of orientation, attention, or cognitive function