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Psychotic Disorder Due to Another Medical Condition

ByMatcheri S. Keshavan, MD, Harvard Medical School
Reviewed ByMark Zimmerman, MD, South County Psychiatry
Reviewed/Revised Modified Jul 2025
v8914110
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Psychotic disorder due to another medical condition is characterized by hallucinations or delusions that are caused by a general medical disorder.

Psychosis refers to symptoms such as delusions, hallucinations, disorganized thinking and speech, and bizarre and inappropriate motor behavior (including catatonia) that indicate loss of contact with reality.

This diagnosis applies when psychosis is due to the physiologic effects of a general medical condition. Examples are psychotic behavior or olfactory hallucinations that are sometimes associated with temporal lobe epilepsy and the contralateral neglect syndrome that is sometimes caused by parietal lobe lesions.

General medical disorders that may cause psychosis include central nervous system tumors and other space-occupying lesions, infections, stroke, migraine, and various endocrine disorders, as well as autoimmune, metabolic, nutritional, and degenerative neurologic disorders (1 ).

The diagnosis is not used if patients have a psychologically mediated response to medical illness (eg, intensive care unit [ICU] psychosis), psychosis due to the effects of medications or medication withdrawal, or delirium caused by a medical condition (2).

It is essential to establish a temporal relationship between the general medical condition and the psychotic disorder (ie, they begin and end at the same time).

Treating the general medical condition often reduces the severity of psychotic symptoms, but some patients also need specific treatment for the psychotic symptoms.

References

  1. 1. Keshavan MS, Kaneko Y. Secondary psychoses: an update. World Psychiatry. 2013 Feb;12(1):4-15. doi: 10.1002/wps.20001

  2. 2. American Psychiatric Association. Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, Fifth Edition Text Revision, DSM-5-TR (DSM-5-TR). American Psychiatric Association Publishing, Washington, DC, 2022, 132-135.

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