A Comparison of Purposeless Movements in Psychiatric Patients Treated with Antipsychotic Drugs, and Normal Individuals
Overview
Neurosurgery
Psychiatry
Authors
Affiliations
Oro-facial dyskinesia and purposeless trunk and limb movements were assessed, using a standard videotape rating technique, in 182 psychiatric patients receiving antipsychotic medication, in a second sample of 43 elderly psychiatric patients also receiving antipsychotic drugs, and 85 normal, drug-naive subjects. In both the first patient sample and the group of normal subjects, oro-facial dyskinesia was more common over 50 years of age. Statistical analysis of the data suggested that drug-induced oro-facial dyskinesia has a characteristic pattern of movement distribution significantly different from that of idiopathic oro-facial dyskinesia. The videotapes of the first patient sample and the normal subjects were viewed by a neurologist who assessed and categorised all movements. Purposeless trunk and limb movements were classified as either normal or abnormal. Normal purposeless movements were significantly more common in the drug-naive subjects. The presence of abnormal movements such as choreiform movements, dystonias and stereotypies and mannerisms was limited, almost exclusively, to the patients.
Movement disorders of the mouth: a review of the common phenomenologies.
Ghadery C, Kalia L, Connolly B J Neurol. 2022; 269(11):5812-5830.
PMID: 35904592 DOI: 10.1007/s00415-022-11299-1.
Kiang M, Daskalakis Z, Christensen B, Remington G, Kapur S J Psychiatry Neurosci. 2003; 28(4):293-9.
PMID: 12921224 PMC: 165794.
Movements in never-medicated schizophrenics: a preliminary study.
Fenn D, Moussaoui D, Hoffman W, Kadri N, Bentounssi B, Tilane A Psychopharmacology (Berl). 1996; 123(2):206-10.
PMID: 8741945 DOI: 10.1007/BF02246179.
Persistent akathisia associated with early tardive dyskinesia.
Barnes T, Braude W Postgrad Med J. 1984; 60(703):359-61.
PMID: 6146131 PMC: 2417855. DOI: 10.1136/pgmj.60.703.359.
Gureje O J Neurol Neurosurg Psychiatry. 1988; 51(12):1525-30.
PMID: 2906088 PMC: 1032768. DOI: 10.1136/jnnp.51.12.1525.