Long term treatment of tardive dyskinesia.

J Clin Psychiatry

Published: February 1979

A 4 year trial to treat tardive dyskinesia by a very slow progressive stepwise diminution of the neuroleptic dose and of antiparkinsonian agents as well as by administration of small, slowly increasing and then decreasing doses of reserpine or haloperidol was conducted on 62 chronic schizophrenic patients. This treatment program caused disappearance of tardive dyskinesia in 23, improvement in 26 patients and had no effect in 13 patients. The group of patients with disappearance of tardive dyskinesia had a mean age significantly lower than other groups. The rationale of this treatment was based on the concept of "desensitization" by a slow, progressive unblocking of dopaminergic receptor sites. Another tardive neuroleptic side effect, the "rabbit syndrome" was successfully treated in 7 other patients by antiparkinsonian drugs.

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