Patients presenting with comorbid stimulant use disorder is a common occurrence in nearly all medical specialties. New clinical strategies to care for patients experiencing stimulant withdrawal should be considered as an effort to improve clinical outcomes. Our patient, a woman in her early 20s with a history of substance use disorder and unspecified bipolar and related disorder, presented with acute psychosis with symptoms including agitation, auditory hallucinations, and delusions in the context of chronic mental illness and cocaine abuse. She was subsequently admitted to the inpatient psychiatry unit. Notable symptoms included mood swings, erratic behavior, anger, and agitation. Mood and psychotic symptoms were treated with olanzapine. She also received medications, including haloperidol, lorazepam, and diphenhydramine, as needed for agitation, which were given as an emergency treat option (ETO) injection. The patient continuously exhibited irritability and endorsed that she was undergoing cocaine withdrawal symptoms, for which she was started on bupropion. Within days of taking this medication, she reported significant improvement in her psychotic and mood symptoms. The patient continued this treatment during the remainder of her stay until the resolution of her symptoms and was discharged with both bupropion and olanzapine to continue while awaiting an outpatient psychiatry appointment in one week.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10191240PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.7759/cureus.37700DOI Listing

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