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001 267720
016 _a000311598000009
022 _a1017-7833
040 _aNEU
041 _aeng
050 _aQZ4
100 1 _9576688
_aZincir, Serkan.
245 1 0 _aA Case of Tardive Dyskinesia Due to Olanzapine Treatment.
_cSerkan Zincir, Ali Emrah Bilgen, Murat Erdem, Hüseyin Gunay, Ali Bozkurt.
260 _c2012.
_bKüre iletişim,
_aİstanbul :
520 _aA case of tardive dyskinesia due to olanzapine treatment. Tardive dyskinesia (TD) is a complex of abnormal reflex movements involving the tongue, body, arms, and legs after the use of antipsychotics. These movements are generally choreiform, athetoid, or rhythmic. According to the DSM-IV, these reflex movements must have been present for at least four weeks and the antipsychotic medication should have been used for at least 3 months (at least 1 month if the patient is 60 years or older) for the TD to have been caused by the use of antipsychotic drugs. TD development is much more common with the use of high potency classic antipsychotics that block dopamine receptors in the nigrostriatal area and the risk increases as the dosage increases. Atypical antipsychotics such as risperidone, olanzapine, quetiapine, and ziprasidone have lower risks for TD development. Olanzapine has been used in the treatment of cases where tardive dyskinesia occurred due to other psychotropic medications and there are rare case reports about olanzapine caused tardive dyskinesia. In this report, a case of tardive dyskinesia due to olanzapine use in a 24 year-old male patient is discussed in the light of existing literature.
650 0 _9125051
_aPharmacology
650 0 _9572720
_aNear East University Article
650 0 _9572723
_aYakın Doğu Üniversitesi Makale
650 0 _9576689
_aOlanzapine
773 _aKlinik Psikofarmakoloji Bulteni-
_aBulletin Of Clinical Psychopharmacology
_gSEP 2012, Vol 22 Issue 3, p268-270
_x10177833
856 _uhttp://library.neu.edu.tr:2048/login?url=http://dx.doi.org/10.5455/bcp.20120731060853
942 _x1000007
_kQZ0000004C372012
_cOED
999 _c244384