Division of Developmental Medicine, Boston Children's Hospital, Boston, MA.
Department of Pediatrics, Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA.
J Dev Behav Pediatr. 2019 Jan;40(1):72-74. doi: 10.1097/DBP.0000000000000635.
James is a 7½-year-old boy born in Vietnam to a mother with mental illness. Little is known about his early history; he spent the first 6 months of his life in an orphanage, followed by foster care and a disrupted adoption. He moved to the U.S. at age 1½ and joined his current adoptive family at age 4 years. Shortly thereafter, James' psychiatric nurse practitioner diagnosed him with attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) and autism spectrum disorder (ASD). Pragmatic language and syntax deficits were also noted from an early age.James is now exhibiting anxiety, perseverative beliefs, and regression in his toileting. He began "talking to himself in his room" and using neologisms. A school-based evaluation resulted in educational diagnoses of ADHD and ASD based on social disconnectedness and invading others' personal space. James' parents felt "something else was going on" and sought a second opinion with a multidisciplinary team (consisting of a pediatric psychologist and a developmental pediatrician). Considering James' history, previous assessments, and their assessment battery (Behavior Assessment System for Children, Behavior Rating Inventory of Executive Function, and Autism Diagnostic Observation Schedule, and Rorschach Inkblot Test), the team characterized his current symptoms as an emerging psychotic disorder.Several consultations occurred over the next 9 months of the school term. First, clinicians in the psychiatry department confirmed symptoms of functional decline, cognitive disorganization, and hallucinations, which were attributed to post-traumatic stress rather than a psychotic disorder. Second, adding to the diagnostic uncertainty, when James started an atypical antipsychotic medication and was under good symptom control, the school team believed that ADHD-not psychosis-best accounted for his presentation. There was significant contention between the medical team and consulting school psychologist regarding the extent to which data from the parental history and Rorschach should be considered in formulating the patient's diagnosis.Two-and-a-half years later, James was weaned off risperidone to manage a new side effect of tics. He subsequently manifested significant paranoia with reactive aggression toward peers for imagined slights and insults that he could "swear he heard." A different school-contracted psychologist's re-evaluation corroborated the diagnosis of schizophrenia based on the several years of unfolding clinical observations. Acting from the supposition that early-onset psychosis was too rare and too stigmatizing a condition to apply to a "kid who's just having trouble paying attention," the first school psychologist remained adamant that ADHD and ASD were the most appropriate diagnoses, and James would be ill-served "pumped full of neuroleptics."He returns now to the original Developmental Behavioral Pediatric consulting team. What would you do to try to bridge this impasse?
詹姆斯是一名 7 岁半的男孩,出生于越南,母亲患有精神疾病。他的早期经历鲜为人知;他在孤儿院度过了生命的头 6 个月,随后接受了寄养和收养。他在 1 岁半时搬到了美国,4 岁时加入了现在的收养家庭。此后不久,詹姆斯的精神科护士从业者诊断他患有注意缺陷多动障碍(ADHD)和自闭症谱系障碍(ASD)。从早期开始,还注意到他的语用和语法缺陷。
现在,詹姆斯表现出焦虑、固执的信念和如厕能力的倒退。他开始“在自己的房间里自言自语”,并使用新词。一项基于学校的评估根据社交脱节和侵犯他人个人空间,得出了 ADHD 和 ASD 的教育诊断。詹姆斯的父母觉得“还有其他问题”,于是寻求一个多学科团队(由一名儿科心理学家和一名发育儿科医生组成)的意见。考虑到詹姆斯的病史、以前的评估以及他们的评估工具包(儿童行为评估系统、执行功能行为评定量表和自闭症诊断观察量表,以及罗夏墨迹测验),该团队将他目前的症状描述为一种新出现的精神病障碍。
在接下来的 9 个月的学期中,进行了多次咨询。首先,精神病学部门的临床医生证实了功能下降、认知混乱和幻觉的症状,这些症状归因于创伤后应激而不是精神病障碍。其次,增加了诊断的不确定性,当詹姆斯开始服用一种非典型抗精神病药物并且症状得到很好的控制时,学校团队认为 ADHD——而不是精神病——最能解释他的表现。医疗团队和咨询学校心理学家之间存在很大争议,他们认为应该在多大程度上考虑父母病史和罗夏的信息来制定患者的诊断。
两年半后,詹姆斯停止服用利培酮以治疗新出现的抽动症副作用。随后,他表现出明显的偏执狂,对同伴的想象中的侮辱和冒犯产生反应性攻击,他“发誓他听到了”。一名不同的学校签约心理学家的重新评估证实了精神分裂症的诊断,这是基于几年来不断发展的临床观察。第一位学校心理学家坚持认为,注意缺陷多动障碍和自闭症谱系障碍是最合适的诊断,因为“只是注意力不集中的孩子”,过早出现的精神病太罕见,太污名化,不能应用于这个孩子,而詹姆斯如果“被大量神经阻滞剂治疗”,情况会更糟。
他现在回到了最初的发育行为儿科咨询团队。你会怎么做来试图弥合这一僵局?