TY - JOUR
T1 - Cycloid psychoses revisited
T2 - Case reports, literature review, and commentary
AU - Salvatore, Paola
AU - Bhuvaneswar, Chaya
AU - Ebert, Daniel
AU - Maggini, Carlo
AU - Baldessarini, Ross J.
PY - 2008/5
Y1 - 2008/5
N2 - Emil Kraepelin proposed to separate psychiatric disorders with psychotic features into two major categories, dementia præcox (later schizophrenia) and manic-depressive insanity (later bipolar disorder and major depression). Over the past century, there have been many efforts to categorize conditions that do not fit readily in either group. These conditions include many cases of acute psychotic illnesses of limited duration, with recovery between recurrences. For some of these conditions, Karl Kleist proposed the term cycloid psychosis: acute features were psychotic, as in schizophrenia, but the course was episodic, as in manic-depression. His concept was later elaborated by Karl Leonhard and Carlo Perris, and validated by modern studies. Leonhard described three overlapping cycloid subtypes (anxiety-beatific, excited-inhibited confusional, and hyperkinetic-akinetic motility dysfunction forms); Perris proposed a more unitary syndrome with operational diagnostic criteria; and recent investigators have considered relatively affective versus thought-disordered subtypes. The cycloid concept is not explicitly included in standard international diagnostic schemes, but both DSM-IV and ICD-10 have broad categories for acute, recurrent psychotic disorders, whose validity remains insecure. We present two cases of probable cycloid psychosis, review the history of the concept, and propose that it be reconsidered as a clinically useful category whose validity and utility for prognosis and treatment can be further tested.
AB - Emil Kraepelin proposed to separate psychiatric disorders with psychotic features into two major categories, dementia præcox (later schizophrenia) and manic-depressive insanity (later bipolar disorder and major depression). Over the past century, there have been many efforts to categorize conditions that do not fit readily in either group. These conditions include many cases of acute psychotic illnesses of limited duration, with recovery between recurrences. For some of these conditions, Karl Kleist proposed the term cycloid psychosis: acute features were psychotic, as in schizophrenia, but the course was episodic, as in manic-depression. His concept was later elaborated by Karl Leonhard and Carlo Perris, and validated by modern studies. Leonhard described three overlapping cycloid subtypes (anxiety-beatific, excited-inhibited confusional, and hyperkinetic-akinetic motility dysfunction forms); Perris proposed a more unitary syndrome with operational diagnostic criteria; and recent investigators have considered relatively affective versus thought-disordered subtypes. The cycloid concept is not explicitly included in standard international diagnostic schemes, but both DSM-IV and ICD-10 have broad categories for acute, recurrent psychotic disorders, whose validity remains insecure. We present two cases of probable cycloid psychosis, review the history of the concept, and propose that it be reconsidered as a clinically useful category whose validity and utility for prognosis and treatment can be further tested.
KW - ATPD
KW - Acute psychosis
KW - Brief psychotic disorder
KW - Cycloid psychosis
KW - History
KW - NAARP
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=45849120210&partnerID=8YFLogxK
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/citedby.url?scp=45849120210&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1080/10673220802167899
DO - 10.1080/10673220802167899
M3 - Review article
C2 - 18569038
AN - SCOPUS:45849120210
SN - 1067-3229
VL - 16
SP - 167
EP - 180
JO - Harvard review of psychiatry
JF - Harvard review of psychiatry
IS - 3
ER -