Tardive dystonia is a movement disorder dominated by involuntary muscle contractions that may be tonic, spasmodic, patterned or repetitive, associated with the use of dopamine-receptor blocking agents. Most of the patients with tardive dystonia present initially with blepharospasm. Treatment of dystonia is generally disappointing. A patient with chronic paranoid schizophrenia who developed blepharospasm is described here. Blepharospasm remitted after a course of electroconvulsive therapy. Remission was sustained until 3 months after stopping maintenance electroconvulsive therapy.status: publishe
Although it has been suggested that second-generation antipsychotics (SGA) may reduce the rate of pr...
Background: Several studies have examined reversibility of tardive syndromes (TS), primarily in psyc...
Despite advances in treatments, relapses in schizophrenia still occur. The causes of relapse are not...
Tardive dystonia is a movement disorder which develops with twisting of one part of the body or abno...
Dystonia, a serious side effect of antipsychotic drugs, has two kinds of acute and chronic (tardive)...
Tardive dystonia is one of the extrapyramidal syndromes and occurs after prolonged treatment with n...
In isolated, sporadic dystonia, it has been occasionally reported that some patients might undergo s...
BACKGROUND: Severe tardive dyskinesia or dystonia (TD) are side-effects of dopamine-blocking agents,...
Introduction. Tardive dyskinesia is a movement disorder that begins due to dopamine receptor-blockin...
BackgroundBlepharospasm can be present as an isolated dystonia or in conjunction with other forms of...
Tardive syndrome (TS) refers to persistent hyperkinetic, hypokinetic, and sensory complaints appeari...
Tardive dystonia is an uncommon form of chronic dystonia, which usually develops on exposure to neur...
BACKGROUND: Severe tardive dyskinesia or dystonia (TD) are side-effects of dopamine-blocking agents,...
Classical tardive dyskinesia (TD) is a disorder with perioral (orobuccolinguomasticatory) choreiform...
Background: Aripiprazole can cause irreversible tardive dystonia in some individuals, and additional...
Although it has been suggested that second-generation antipsychotics (SGA) may reduce the rate of pr...
Background: Several studies have examined reversibility of tardive syndromes (TS), primarily in psyc...
Despite advances in treatments, relapses in schizophrenia still occur. The causes of relapse are not...
Tardive dystonia is a movement disorder which develops with twisting of one part of the body or abno...
Dystonia, a serious side effect of antipsychotic drugs, has two kinds of acute and chronic (tardive)...
Tardive dystonia is one of the extrapyramidal syndromes and occurs after prolonged treatment with n...
In isolated, sporadic dystonia, it has been occasionally reported that some patients might undergo s...
BACKGROUND: Severe tardive dyskinesia or dystonia (TD) are side-effects of dopamine-blocking agents,...
Introduction. Tardive dyskinesia is a movement disorder that begins due to dopamine receptor-blockin...
BackgroundBlepharospasm can be present as an isolated dystonia or in conjunction with other forms of...
Tardive syndrome (TS) refers to persistent hyperkinetic, hypokinetic, and sensory complaints appeari...
Tardive dystonia is an uncommon form of chronic dystonia, which usually develops on exposure to neur...
BACKGROUND: Severe tardive dyskinesia or dystonia (TD) are side-effects of dopamine-blocking agents,...
Classical tardive dyskinesia (TD) is a disorder with perioral (orobuccolinguomasticatory) choreiform...
Background: Aripiprazole can cause irreversible tardive dystonia in some individuals, and additional...
Although it has been suggested that second-generation antipsychotics (SGA) may reduce the rate of pr...
Background: Several studies have examined reversibility of tardive syndromes (TS), primarily in psyc...
Despite advances in treatments, relapses in schizophrenia still occur. The causes of relapse are not...