Literature DB >> 15189106

New nomenclature for drug-induced movement disorders including tardive dyskinesia.

Guy Chouinard1.   

Abstract

Psychotropic agents are increasingly being prescribed by different specialty clinicians for a variety of psychiatric illnesses, making it necessary to improve understanding of the etiology, diagnosis, and management of drug-induced movement disorders (D-IMD) across medical specialties. Early descriptions of movement disorders were based on identifiable disease states such as parkinsonism, dystonia deformans, and Huntington's chorea, which introduced complicated and often overlapping nomenclature. This has hindered communication about, description of, and diagnosis of these drug-induced disorders. Research criteria for tardive dyskinesia, a specific, purposeless, involuntary, hyperkinetic, potentially persistent D-IMD, have varied, with relatively few data-driven conclusions available to support clinical decision-making. The differences in research criteria among published reports on rates of tardive dyskinesia with atypical antipsychotics make it difficult to find meaningful comparisons and conclusions between atypicals. A novel system for classifying D-IMD according to whether they are reversible or persistent, hypokinetic or hyperkinetic, and dystonic or nondystonic is proposed. This new classification system will provide clinicians and researchers across specialties a more precise language, which will hopefully improve the diagnosis of and research criteria for D-IMD.

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Year:  2004        PMID: 15189106

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Clin Psychiatry        ISSN: 0160-6689            Impact factor:   4.384


  6 in total

1.  Prevalence of movement disorders in adolescent patients with schizophrenia and in relationship to predominantly atypical antipsychotic treatment.

Authors:  Stefan Gebhardt; Fabian Härtling; Markus Hanke; Markus Mittendorf; Frank M Theisen; Karin Wolf-Ostermann; Phillip Grant; Matthias Martin; Christian Fleischhaker; Eberhard Schulz; Helmut Remschmidt
Journal:  Eur Child Adolesc Psychiatry       Date:  2006-04-28       Impact factor: 4.785

Review 2.  Interrelations between psychiatric symptoms and drug-induced movement disorder.

Authors:  Guy Chouinard
Journal:  J Psychiatry Neurosci       Date:  2006-05       Impact factor: 6.186

3.  The incidence of tardive dyskinesia in the study of pharmacotherapy for psychotic depression.

Authors:  Daniel M Blumberger; Benoit H Mulsant; Dora Kanellopoulos; Ellen M Whyte; Anthony J Rothschild; Alastair J Flint; Barnett S Meyers
Journal:  J Clin Psychopharmacol       Date:  2013-06       Impact factor: 3.153

4.  Drug safety monitoring in patients of movement disorders of a tertiary care hospital.

Authors:  Ananya Mandal; Suparna Chatterjee; Shyamal Kumar Das; Amar Mishra
Journal:  Indian J Pharmacol       Date:  2010-08       Impact factor: 1.200

5.  Validity of Simpson-Angus Scale (SAS) in a naturalistic schizophrenia population.

Authors:  Sven Janno; Matti M Holi; Katinka Tuisku; Kristian Wahlbeck
Journal:  BMC Neurol       Date:  2005-03-17       Impact factor: 2.474

6.  Pharmacogenetics of antipsychotic adverse effects: Case studies and a literature review for clinicians.

Authors:  Adriana Foster; Zixuan Wang; Manzoor Usman; Edna Stirewalt; Peter Buckley
Journal:  Neuropsychiatr Dis Treat       Date:  2007-12       Impact factor: 2.570

  6 in total

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