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Lorazepam treatment of acute and chronic catatonia in two mentally retarded brothers.

BACKGROUND: Acute catatonia of the retarded type responds rapidly to treatment with lorazepam. There is little information about (1) the efficacy of benzodiazepines in patients with longstanding catatonic syndrome; (2) the effect of longer-term lorazepam therapy in catatonic patients who do not respond to a brief trial of the medication; and (3) the development of catatonic syndromes in family members.

METHOD: We gave lorazepam to two mentally retarded brothers with catatonia. One had become catatonic 2 weeks before starting treatment while the other had been hospitalized in a catatonic state for 5 years.

RESULTS: The brother with acute catatonia recovered slowly but completely within 2 weeks of starting lorazepam. The brother with long-standing catatonia responded gradually during the first 5 months of treatment and required higher doses of lorazepam but did eventually recover and was discharged from the hospital on a regimen of lorazepam after 1 year of treatment.

CONCLUSION: (1) Lorazepam may be effective even in patients who have been catatonic for years. (2) Catatonic patients who do not recover immediately with lorazepam may respond to a longer course or higher doses of the medication. (3) There may be a familial predisposition to developing catatonia in response to stressful situations.

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