Tardive dyskinesia is characterised by oral grimaces with chewing and sucking movements - oro-facial dyskinesia. There are also choreoathetoid movements of the upper limbs. The movements disappear during sleep.
Tardive dyskinesia may occur after neuroleptic treatment; the risk of it developing rises with increasing age and prolonged exposure to the offending drug. A cohort study involving 261 patients aged over 55 years and previously untreated with conventional antipsychotic drugs, revealed that the cumulative rates of tardive dyskinesia were 25% after 1 year and 53% after 3 years cumulative exposure to conventional antipsychotics (1)
After drug withdrawal, dyskinesias disappear over a period of 3 years in 60% of patients. However, the remainder have persistent symptoms. There is no response to anti - parkinson drugs (may make symptoms worse). Other extrapyramidal complications of phenothiazine therapy (e.g. drug-induced parkinsonism, acute dystonia, akathisia) tend to respond rapidly to phenothiazine withdrawal or to anticholinergic medication.
This condition is thought to occur because of an increase in the number of dopamine receptors.
The symptoms can initially be alleviated by increasing the dose of the anti-psychotic drug but this will worsen the condition in the long term.
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