Previous Page  22 / 37 Next Page
Information
Show Menu
Previous Page 22 / 37 Next Page
Page Background

Page 56

conferenceseries

.com

Volume 6

Journal of Child & Adolescent Behavior

October 01-02, 2018 Osaka, Japan

30

th

World

Psychiatrists and Psychologists Meet

World Psychiatrists 2018

October 01-02, 2018

Physical illness complicating the presentation of bipolar disorder in an elderly patient:Acase report

Zhao Zhenru and Giles Tan Ming Yee

Institute of Mental Health, Singapore

I

t is well known that psychiatric symptoms may be caused by a wide variety of medical as well as psychiatric illnesses and it

can be difficult to determine the real underlying aetiology without longitudinal observation. It is a case report of a patient

with no previous psychiatric history who presented with altered mental status. The diagnosis was revised from acute psychosis

to acute delirium and subsequently to bipolar affective disorder. A 62 year old Malay gentleman presented with a brief two

day history of disorientation, disruptive behaviors and persecutory delusions that people were spying on him. There was no

significant past psychiatric history or family history of mental illness; he had never taken any psychiatric medications before

and did not abuse alcohol or illicit drugs. He had an organic workup done which was unremarkable. He was initially diagnosed

with acute psychosis and treated with haloperidol l5 mg at night. Over the next 5 days, his agitation worsened and he was found

to have inflammation of his left knee which was due to a flare up of gout. He was treated with colchicine and paracetamol and

the inflammation subsided and the psychiatric symptoms also resolved spontaneously. As a result, the diagnosis was revised to

acute delirium and haloperidol was stopped. He represented again two weeks later with full-blown symptoms of mania which

included elated mood, increased energy and goal-directed thinking and activity, pressured speech and grandiose delusions.

Repeated investigations were normal. The diagnosis was revised to bipolar affective disorder according to DSM-V criteria. The

medication haloperidol was restarted and the dose was increased to 5 mg twice a day. The manic symptoms remitted after two

weeks of treatment. This report adds to the body of evidence suggesting that physical conditions and psychiatric illness can

complicate each other. Close longitudinal observation and follow-up is recommended for the proper diagnosis and management.

zhenru.zhao@mohh.com.sg

J Child Adolesc Behav 2018, Volume 6

DOI: 10.4172/2375-4494-C1-006