Skip to content

The Lysing of Catatonia With Intravenous Ketamine Prior to Definitive Treatment With Electroconvulsive Therapy.

Erich J Conrad, Zachary F Stielper, Isabelle V Mermilliod, Matthew R Eng

The journal of ECT April 15, 2025 DOI: 10.1097/YCT.0000000000001151

Summary

Intravenous ketamine emerged as a rapid solution for a patient with severe catatonia, bridging the gap until electroconvulsive therapy could begin. When legal delays prevented immediate ECT treatment, doctors successfully used ketamine to temporarily reverse the patient's condition, avoiding complications from prolonged immobility and eliminating the need for invasive feeding procedures.

Abstract

The presence of catatonia refractory to routine pharmacologic management is often subsequently managed by electroconvulsive therapy. However, legal obstacles that delay the initiation of electroconvulsive therapy in a timely fashion may be present. This may lead to prolonged risks associated with immobility and result in other procedures such as percutaneous endoscopic gastrostomy (PEG) tube placement. We present a case of successful lysing of catatonia with intravenous ketamine that allowed a patient to avoid potential complications and other procedures prior to definitive treatment with electroconvulsive therapy. Further research of this potential treatment of catatonia is needed as this may change the current approach to refractory catatonia.

Tags

Comments

No comments yet.

Log in to comment