Psychiatric Assessment and Consultation
Psychiatric consultation in the general hospital
The process of the consultation
Speak directly with the referring clinician
Review the current records and pertinent past records
Review the patient’s medications
Gather collateral data
Interview and examine the patient
Mental status examination
Physical examination
Formulate diagnostic and therapeutic strategies
Routine tests
Neuroimaging
Electrophysiological tests
Other tests
Write a note
Speak directly with the referring clinician
Provide periodic follow-up
Role of other providers
Screening
Benefits of psychiatric services
Conclusion
Psychiatric presentations of medical conditions |
Psychiatric complications of medical conditions or treatments |
Psychological reactions to medical conditions or treatments |
Medical presentations of psychiatric conditions |
Medical complications of psychiatric conditions or treatments |
Comorbid medical and psychiatric conditions |
Source: Adapted from Lipowski 1967
Speak directly with the referring clinician. |
Review the current records and pertinent past records. |
Review the patient’s medications. |
Gather collateral data. |
Interview and examine the patient. |
Formulate diagnostic and therapeutic strategies. |
Write a note. |
Speak directly with the referring clinician. |
Provide periodic follow-up. |
Level of consciousness |
Alert, drowsy, somnolent, stuporous, comatose; fluctuations suggest delirium |
Appearance and behavior |
Overall appearance, grooming, hygiene |
Cooperation, eye contact, psychomotor agitation or retardation |
Abnormal movements: tics, tremors, chorea, posturing |
Attention |
Vigilance, concentration, ability to focus, sensory neglect |
Orientation and memory |
Orientation to person, place, time, situation |
Recent, remote, and immediate recall |
Language |
Speech: rate, volume, fluency, prosody |
Comprehension and naming ability |
Abnormalities include aphasia, dysarthria, agraphia, alexia, clanging, neologisms, echolalia |
Constructional ability |
Clock drawing to assess neglect, executive function, and planning |
Drawing of a cube or intersecting pentagons to assess parietal function |
Mood and affect |
Mood: subjective sustained emotion |
Affect: observed emotion—quality, range, appropriateness |
Form and content of thought |
Form: linear, circumstantial, tangential, disorganized, blocked |
Content: delusions, paranoia, ideas of reference, suicidal or homicidal ideation |
Perception |
Auditory, visual, gustatory, tactile, olfactory hallucinations |
Judgment and insight |
Understanding of illness and consequences of specific treatments offered |
Reasoning |
Illogical versus logical; ability to make consistent decisions |
Source: Adapted from Hyman and Tesar 1994
Cognitive domain | Assessment |
---|---|
Level of consciousness and arousal | Inspect the patient |
Orientation to place and time | Ask direct questions about both of these |
Registration (recent memory) | Have the patient repeat three words immediately |
Recall (working memory) | Have the patient recall the same three words after performing another task for at least 3 minutes |
Remote memory | Ask about the patient’s age, date of birth, milestones, or significant life or historical events (e.g., names of presidents, dates of wars) |
Attention and concentration | Subtract serial 7s (adapt to the patient’s level of education; subtract serial 3s if less educated). Spell world backward (this may be difficult for non-English speakers). Test digit span forward and backward. Have the patient recite the months of the year (or the days of the week) in reverse order. |
Language | (Adapt the degree of difficulty to the patient’s educational level) |
Comprehension | Inspect the patient while he or she answers questions Ask the patient to point to different objects Ask yes or no questions Ask the patient to write a phrase (paragraph) |
Naming | Show a watch, pen, or less familiar objects, if needed |
Fluency | Assess the patient’s speech Have the patient name as many animals as he or she can in 1 minute |
Articulation | Listen to the patient’s speech Have the patient repeat a phrase |
Reading | Have the patient read a sentence (or a longer paragraph if needed) |
Executive function | Determine if the patient requires constant cueing and prompting |
Commands | Have the patient follow a three-step command |
Construction | Have the patient draw interlocked pentagons Have the patient draw a clock |
Motor programming tasks | Have the patient perform serial hand sequences Have the patient perform reciprocal programs of raising fingers |
Judgment and reasoning | Listen to the patient’s account of his or her history and reason for hospitalization Assess abstraction (similarities: dog/cat; red/green) |
Ask about the patient’s judgment about simple events or problems: “A construction worker fell to the ground from the seventh floor of the building and broke his two legs; he then ran to the nearby hospital to ask for medical help. Do you have any comment on this?” |
Elements | Examples of Possible Diagnoses |
---|---|
General | |
General appearance healthier than expected | Somatoform disorder |
Fever | Infection or NMS |
Blood pressure or pulse abnormalities | Withdrawal, thyroid or cardiovascular disease |
Body habitus | Eating disorders, polycystic ovaries, or Cushing syndrome |
Skin | |
Diaphoresis | Fever, withdrawal, NMS |
Dry, flushed | Anticholinergic toxicity, heat stroke |
Pallor | Anemia |
Changes in hair, nails, skin | Malnutrition, thyroid or adrenal disease |
Jaundice | Liver disease |
Characteristic stigmata | Syphilis, cirrhosis, or self-mutilation |
Bruises | Physical abuse, ataxia, traumatic brain injury |
Eyes | |
Mydriasis | Opiate withdrawal, anticholinergic toxicity |
Miosis | Opiate intoxication, cholinergic toxicity |
Kayser-Fleischer pupillary rings | Wilson’s disease |
Neurological | |
Tremors | Delirium, withdrawal syndromes, parkinsonism |
Primitive reflexes present (e.g., snout, glabellar, and grasp) | Dementia, frontal lobe dysfunction |
Hyperactive deep-tendon reflexes | Withdrawal, hyperthyroidism |
Ophthalmoplegia | Wernicke’s encephalopathy, brain stem dysfunction, dystonic reaction |
Papilledema | Increased intracranial pressure |
Hypertonia, rigidity, catatonia, parkinsonism | EPS, NMS |
Abnormal movements | Parkinson’s disease, Huntington’s disease, EPS |
Abnormal gait | Normal pressure hydrocephalus, Parkinson’s disease, Wernicke’s encephalopathy |
Loss of position and vibratory sense | Vitamin B12 deficiency |
Note: EPS=extrapyramidal side effects; NMS=neuroleptic malignant syndrome
Complete blood cell count |
Serum chemistry panel |
Thyroid-stimulating hormone (thyrotropin) concentration |
Vitamin B12 (cyanocobalamin) concentration |
Folic acid (folate) concentration |
Human chorionic gonadotropin (pregnancy) test |
Toxicology |
Serum |
Urine |
Serological tests for syphilis |
HIV tests |
Urinalysis |
Chest X ray |
Electrocardiogram |
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