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Recognizing and managing drug-induced movement disorders (DIMDs) in children poses many challenges. Prescribed medications as well as drugs of abuse can induce a variety of movement disorders including tremor, akathisia, hypokinetic/rigid syndromes (parkinsonism), dystonia, chorea, ataxia, tics, and stereotypies, alone or in combination. In the clinical setting of a new prescription or dose increase, the diagnosis may be relatively straightforward. However, if the patient is nonverbal due to age or cognitive capacity and/or has a preexisting movement disorder, diagnosis can be more difficult. Prescribed polypharmacy and illicit drugs, sometimes in combination, also create complex circumstances. Further, some medications produce a withdrawal emergent movement disorder. If this results from noncompliance, and this is not acknowledged, confusion can also arise.
The problem of pediatric DIMDs has received increased attention as the number of children treated with psychotropic medications has increased. Clinical trials as well as systematic reviews such as those from the Cochrane Collaboration , now have more pediatric data. There are studies of polypharmacy, , prospective studies in drug-naïve patients, larger emergency department case series, , and many studies involving children with autism. , Despite the increase in published data, questions remain about pathophysiological mechanisms, optimal treatments, and long-term outcomes. The goal of this chapter is to provide appropriate caution and discuss the limitations of what we know.
From an epidemiologic perspective, increased utilization of psychiatric drugs in children in the US over the past 20 years is well documented. , Of interest, the prevalence of psychotropic use in 2- to 5-year-old children in the US, which increased from 1994 to 2005, may have plateaued at approximately 1%–2%. , Still, this represents, collectively, an enormous exposure to psychotropic agents in the developing child. In general, the prevalence of psychotropic use outside of the US is lower. ,
As is the case for adults, agents that modulate dopamine are the most common causes of DIMDs in children. Because dopamine receptor blocking agents (DRBAs) are widely used in children for a variety of behavioral or gastrointestinal symptoms, these agents will receive special emphasis in this chapter. In the medical literature as well as common parlance, the DRBAs are also called neuroleptics or antipsychotics. The so-called atypical or second-generation DRBAs have a constellation of differences including somewhat lower affinity for the dopamine 2 receptors and varying interactions with serotonin 5-HT 2A and other receptors. Third generation DRBAs such as aripiprazole are believed to act through a partial D2 agonist and mixed agonist/antagonist 5-HT receptor profile. As a result, risk of DIMDs is diminished in patients prescribed these newer DRBAs. However, the absolute number of cases remains high.
Most of what we know about risk for DIMDs comes from studies of adults. A vast quantity of literature is devoted to risk for tardive dyskinesia in cases where DRBAs are prescribed for psychotic disorders. However, in children, DRBAs are often prescribed for psychiatric symptoms which can be difficult to consistently define or classify, such as irritability in autism. It is important to understand that the newer medications may have reduced, but have not eliminated the risk for DIMDs. , Furthermore, the antiemetic drugs metoclopramide and prochlorperazine also act as DRBAs. Polypharmacy is also common, and other medications besides DRBAs, including stimulants, , antidepressants, and anticonvulsants, can also induce movement disorders, as can ingestions and exposures to drugs of abuse. These will also be discussed.
Iatrogenic movement disorders, or DIMDs, are conditions where the abnormal movements are related to the use of medication. Classification terminology is based on time course. Several time courses may occur, as detailed in Table 22.1 . Varying phenomenologies may emerge, as detailed in Table 22.2 and discussed in more detail below under clinical features.
Temporal class | Time course of appearance and duration of movement disorder |
---|---|
Acute | Onset at treatment initiation, within a short time interval, or at the time of a dose increase |
Chronic | Onset early or insidiously during treatment, persistence for weeks or longer while treatment is ongoing |
Tardive | Onset gradually after prolonged (3 months or longer) treatment with the medication and persisting for months or years or permanently, even if medication has been discontinued or dosage reduced |
Withdrawal-emergent | Onset subacutely after dose decreases or discontinuations, persisting for days or longer, or until withdrawn medication is reinitiated |
Designation | Description |
---|---|
Akathisia | Uncomfortable sensation of inner restlessness, relieved by moving. Appearance of fidgeting and restlessness, sometimes stereotyped as with rocking, repetitive scratching, marching when standing |
Ataxia | Inability to generate a normal or expected movement trajectory that cannot be attributed to weakness or involuntary muscle activity. Deficits include dysmetria, dyssynergia, dysdiadochokinesis, as well as problems with balance, eye movements, and gait |
Dyskinesia | Varied hyperkinetic movements, usually stereotypic or choreic. When withdrawal-emergent, may be generalized and ballistic |
Dystonia | Sustained or intermittent muscle contractions causing abnormal, often sustained or repetitive, movements, postures or both. When drug-induced, acutely may manifest with cervical or truncal, oromandibular or lingual-pharyngeal dystonia. When tardive, may manifest with retrocollis (neck extension), sometimes with truncal opisthotonus and arm adduction and internal rotation with wrist flexion |
Hypokinetic/rigid syndrome; parkinsonism | Resting tremor, bradykinesia, rigidity, postural instability |
Myoclonus | Brief repeated, often nonrhythmic, shock-like jerks due to involuntary contraction or relaxation (“negative myoclonus”) of one or more muscles |
Oculogyric crisis | Sustained conjugate eye deviation |
Stereotypies | Involuntary, patterned, coordinated, repetitive, non–goal-directed movements, stop with distraction |
Tics; Tourettism | Involuntary, sudden, rapid, abrupt, repetitive, nonrhythmic, simple or complex motor movements or vocalizations |
Tremor | Oscillatory, rhythmic movement about a fixed point, axis, or plane |
Common DIMDs in children vary widely and include: hypokinetic/rigid syndrome (parkinsonism), dystonia, chorea, tremor, ataxia, tics, stereotypies, and poorly specified dyskinesias. , Additional details about phenomenology and underlying neural circuitry for each of these movement disorders are provided in the named chapters in this book. Akathisia is almost exclusively induced by medications. It is generally discussed as a DIMD because of the motor phenomenology of restlessness, but the core feature is uncomfortable sensations of inner restlessness, with compulsion to move secondarily.
Diagnosis of DIMDs may be straightforward. In most clinical encounters for possible DIMD in children, there is access to past medical history and electronic records to information about what a child has been prescribed, or the parent or guardian can provide this information. Therefore, there may not be a differential diagnosis and etiological search. For this reason, this chapter will be organized according to drug class, rather than according to the phenomenology of the movement disorder.
Low- and high-potency DRBAs have been prescribed for children over multiple decades. These agents are used to reduce aggressive behavior, particularly in children with intellectual impairment and autism. High potency DRBAs haloperidol and pimozide are Food and Drug Administration (FDA) approved to treat tic disorders, as is the partial agonist aripiprazole. In addition, the dopamine receptor blockers metoclopramide and prochlorperazine have been used in children as antiemetics and for migraine-associated nausea for many years. , , Of particular relevance, several newer DRBAs are widely used to treat dysregulated mood and aggression in children with autism, and risperidone and aripiprazole have US FDA approval for this indication.
Studies of prescribing practices since the marketing in the US of the atypical DRBA risperidone in 1993 show dramatic increases in the use of this class of medications for a wide variety of behavior problems in children of all ages. , , Although lagging behind their US counterparts, European physicians have also increasingly prescribed DRBAs for children and adolescents in the past 10 years. The use of these medications in early childhood has contributed to increased risk of obesity and metabolic syndromes, in addition to DIMDs.
Older DRBAs continue to be prescribed because of their effectiveness, relatively lower cost, and concerns about metabolic consequences of the newer, atypical DRBAs, including weight gain and increased risk of type 2 diabetes. , However, most of the increase in prescribing in children for the past 20 years involves the newer DRBAs. The use of DRBAs for their original indications for psychotic disorders is vastly outpaced in children by prescriptions to treat anger, unstable mood, aggression, and autistic spectrum disorder (ASD) behaviors. , Systematic monitoring of prescribing practices and adverse events is lacking in many countries. Some studies suggested a leveling off of psychotropic drug prescribing in children and adolescents after 2010.
It is important for neurologists to be aware of situations and groups of patients at risk for DIMDs. Table 22.3 is meant to aid in this process. Because DRBAs have many short-term and long-terms uses outside of neurology and psychiatry, Table 22.3 shows the US FDA-labeled and non-FDA-labeled indications, but there are other indications besides those listed. Further, while pediatric indications (underlined) form only a subset of the total uses, it is common for pediatric use to follow adult approval, even in the absence of specific pediatric approval or dosing recommendations. Side effects listed are limited to neurologic ones reported, but clinicians should be vigilant for a full spectrum of DIMDs in response to these agents, even if not specifically listed in databases and drug package inserts. Outside of the nervous system, these medications pose risks for a variety of other common side effects, for example, weight gain, and serious side effects, for example, prolonged QT intervals, , which are important for prescribers to be aware of but which lie outside the scope of this chapter.
Medication | FDA labeled indications a | Non-FDA labeled indications | Common adverse events: Neurologic only | Serious adverse events: Neurologic only |
---|---|---|---|---|
Typical Dopamine Receptor Blocking Agents (DRBAs) | ||||
Chlorpromazine | Acute intermittent porphyria Apprehension, presurgical Bipolar disorder Hiccoughs, intractable Nausea and vomiting Problem behavior (severe) Schizophrenia Tetanus, adjunct |
None | Akathisia, dystonia, Parkinsonism, somnolence Tremor |
Ineffective thermoregulation Heatstroke or hypothermia Neuroleptic malignant syndrome Seizure Tardive dyskinesia |
Fluphenazine | Schizophrenia | None | ||
Haloperidol | Tourette syndrome, severe refractory, hyperactive behavior, problematic behavior, schizophrenia | None | Neuroleptic malignant syndrome Seizure Tardive dyskinesia |
|
Metoclopramide | Chemotherapy-induced nausea/vomiting, prophylaxis Diabetic gastroparesis Gastroesophageal reflux disease Intestinal intubation, small bowel Postoperative nausea and vomiting Radiography of gastrointestinal tract, adjunct |
Administration of analgesic Decreased lactation Indigestion Nondiabetic gastroparesis Pheochromocytoma, diagnosis Postoperative atelectasis Vomiting of pregnancy |
Akathisia, dystonia Asthenia Headache Somnolence |
Neuroleptic malignant syndrome Tardive dyskinesia |
Pimozide | Tourette syndrome | Chronic schizophrenia | Akathisia, dizziness, dystonia, Parkinsonism, somnolence Tremor |
Ineffective thermoregulation Heatstroke or hypothermia Neuroleptic malignant syndrome Seizure Tardive dyskinesia |
Prochlorperazine | Nausea and vomiting, severe | None | Akathisia, dizziness Dystonia Parkinsonism Somnolence Tremor |
Neuroleptic malignant Syndrome Tardive dyskinesia |
Sulpiride | None (approved in selected countries for schizophrenia) | NA | Akathisia Dystonia Parkinsonism Somnolence Tremor |
Neuroleptic malignant syndrome, tardive dyskinesia |
Tiapride | Similar to sulpiride | NA | Similar to sulpiride | Similar to sulpiride |
Atypical DRBAs | ||||
Aripiprazole | Autistic disorder—agitation Bipolar disorder—agitation Bipolar I disorder, adjunctive Bipolar I disorder, manic or mixed episodes Major depressive disorder, adjunctive Schizophrenia Tourette syndrome |
Borderline personality disorder | Akathisia Dystonia, headache, insomnia, somnolence Tremor |
Cerebrovascular accident Seizure Tardive dyskinesia Transient ischemic attack |
Asenapine sublingual | Bipolar I, schizophrenia | None | Akathisia Dizziness dyskinesia |
Seizure Somnolence |
Brexpiprazole | Major depression Schizophrenia |
None | Akathisia Dyskinesia |
Seizure |
Cariprazine | Bipolar-I, manic, mixed, depressed Schizophrenia |
None | Akathisia Dyskinesia Somnolence |
Seizure |
Clozapine | Schizophrenia | Psychosis in Parkinson disease | Dizziness Headache Sedation Tremor |
Dystonia Neuroleptic malignant Syndrome Seizure |
Iloperidone | Schizophrenia | None | Dizziness somnolence | Cerebrovascular accident Transient ischemic attack |
Lurasidone | Bipolar-I disorder—depression Schizophrenia |
None | Akathisia Dyskinesia Parkinsonism Somnolence |
Cerebrovascular accident Seizure Tardive dyskinesia Transient ischemic attack |
Olanzapine | Bipolar I disorder—agitation Bipolar disorder—manic or mixed episodes; maintenance Depressed bipolar I disorder, adjunctive Major depressive disorder, adjunctive Schizophrenia |
Agitation, acute—dementia Anorexia nervosa Nausea and vomiting, chemotherapy-induced Delirium Schizophrenia, refractory Severe major depression with psychotic features |
Akathisia Asthenia Somnolence Tremor |
Cerebrovascular disease Dystonia Seizure Status epilepticus |
Paliperidone | Schizoaffective disorder Schizophrenia |
Bipolar I disorder: manic; mixed | Akathisia Dyskinesia Dystonia Parkinsonism Somnolence Tremor |
Dysphagia Tardive dyskinesia |
Quetiapine | Bipolar disorder—acute mania, depressed phase, maintenance Major depressive disorder, adjunct Schizophrenia |
Bipolar disorder, maintenance Major depressive disorder, monotherapy |
Asthenia Dystonia Headache Insomnia Somnolence Tremor |
Neuroleptic malignant syndrome Seizure Tardive dyskinesia |
Risperidone | Autistic disorder—irritability Bipolar I disorder Schizophrenia |
Behavioral syndrome –intellectual disability Tourette syndrome Autism spectrum disorder |
Akathisia Parkinsonism Somnolence |
Neuroleptic malignant syndrome Seizure Tardive dyskinesia |
Ziprasidone | Bipolar disorder—acute mania, maintenance adjunctive Schizophrenia |
Schizoaffective disorder, Tourette | Akathisia, anxiety Dystonia Headache Psychomotor slowing Somnolence Spasmodic movement Tremor |
Neuroleptic malignant syndrome Seizure Tardive dyskinesia |
Vesicular Monoamine Transporter-2 (VMAT2) Inhibitors | ||||
Deutetrabenazine | Chorea—Huntington Tardive dyskinesia |
Insomnia Somnolence |
None | |
Tetrabenazine | Chorea—Huntington | Tardive dyskinesia (O) | Insomnia Sedation |
Akathisia Parkinsonism |
Valbenazine | Tardive dyskinesia | Somnolence | Parkinsonism |
a Underlining indicates there is a USA FDA indication for children. Specifics about FDA approvals for different ages may vary, for example, for risperidone approval, the lower age limits for ASD are 5 years, for Bipolar is 10 years, and for schizophrenia is 13 years. Consult Micromedex, DrugPoint , or other sources for details. (O) indicates orphan drug approval.
Systematic studies have generated widely disparate estimates of risks of DIMDs in children prescribed DRBAs. Differences relate in part to patient case mix as well as ascertainment methodology. A meta-analysis of 10 open-label and controlled studies of atypical DRBAs with duration of 12 months or more, involving 783 children and adolescents, provided one important estimate. Most were studies of risperidone which has relatively high D2 receptor affinity compared to newer DRBAs. Eighty percent of patients were white. Adequate data were available on fewer than half of patients. The authors reported a prevalence of DIMDs of 16%. This included tardive dyskinesia in 0.4%, with two cases associated with risperidone and one with olanzapine. Although this study is important in providing a pediatric estimate across clinical trials, as the authors acknowledged, a number of limitations might have led to population underestimates. These include the use of different raters, different scales or no scale reported, and lack of consistent diagnostic criteria. In addition, it is important to note that exclusion criteria employed, for reasons of scientific validity, in controlled clinical trials can result in nonrepresentative samples. A major factor is that randomized controlled trials often disallow or limit polypharmacy, which is much more common in clinical practice. Still, this is a helpful starting-point estimate for the safety of DRBAs with in children with limited polypharmacy and limited prior exposure to DRBAs.
Another helpful estimate comes from a naturalistic study, where researchers at the Maryland Psychiatric Research Center managed a cohort of 424 pediatric psychiatry patients, ages 5–18 years, over a three-year period. This was a more ethnically diverse and representative sample, and many children carried multiple psychiatric diagnoses and were prescribed polypharmacy. Fewer than 20% of patients were being treated for a psychotic disorder. Most had a mood disorder (80%) and/or attention deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) (64%). The study had a high follow-up rate and a higher use of older DRBAs than we typically see. Researchers were blinded to diagnosis and specific DRBA medication treatment. Standardized scales were utilized, and raters underwent standardized training and reliability testing. The authors reported that 9.3% of their cohort developed a tardive syndrome. Risk factors included African American race, use of older (typical) DRBAs, and longer exposure. A similar estimate of rates of tardive syndromes in children was produced by a systematic literature review at that time. This suggests a number of generalizable factors, in combination with ongoing prescribing of older DRBAs, yields a higher risk of tardive syndromes.
As it is expected for the last decade that most prescriptions in children would be for newer, atypical DRBAs, it is instructive to gather updated estimates of DIMDs from a variety of study methodologies. A meta-analysis of 41 studies of aripiprazole including 2114 children reported an incidence of DIMDs of 17.1%. The most commonly reported were parkinsonism and tremor. Meta-analysis of RCTs and non-RCTs for aripiprazole showed a major cause for discontinuation was akathisia, but this was less common in pediatric compared to adult studies.
Nonrandomized studies have also been instructive, although these do not allow for valid comparisons between DRBAs, as treatment assignment is based on clinician preference and treated groups are likely not equivalent in other important ways. In an observational study involving 265 children and youth most of whom were prescribed risperidone, olanzapine, or quetiapine, 5.8% met criteria for tardive dyskinesia during 1 year of treatment. In another prospective study of DRBA-related adverse events in a DRBA-naïve cohort of 190 children and adolescents which included 29% having psychotic symptoms, systematic evaluation for adverse events was performed over a one-year period. The most commonly prescribed agents were risperidone (50%) and aripiprazole (36%), and polypharmacy was relatively common. Among 108 children completing follow-up at 12 months, the overall proportion at 1 year with any type of neurological side effect (including headache) was 51%. Unfortunately, there was not a straightforward estimate of percentages of children experiencing all DIMDs. A 12-week naturalistic treatment comparison in 342 youth treated with five different DRBAs (aripiprazole, olanzapine, quetiapine, risperidone, and ziprasidone) reported drug-induced parkinsonism in 15%, dyskinesia in 8.3%, akathisia in 4.8%, and discontinuation due to DIMDs in 3.3%. No patients were diagnosed with neuroleptic malignant syndrome (NMS).
Finally, case reports can highlight risks for which clinicians should be vigilant, although risk estimation is tenuous. Examples include a case of an eight-year old treated for 7 months who developed classic involuntary facial movements which started during a 7.5-month course of metoclopramide and persisted for 15 months after discontinuation ; a case of an infant treated with 5 times the recommended metoclopramide dose due to a metric mL/teaspoon prescribing error, for 7 days, followed by a 10 day taper, who displayed irritability during treatment, and developed body and tongue movements 1–2 months later, with the tongue movements persisting for at least another 9 months.
As these various studies show, similar to adults, both older and newer DRBAs are prone to induce parkinsonism, dystonia, tics, tremor, oculogyric movements, orolingual and other dyskinesias, and akathisia. Tardive dyskinesia risk in childhood with the newer DRBAs is reduced but not eliminated. Symptoms may emerge at any time after treatment initiation Acute DIMDs, especially dystonia, oculogyric crises, and akathisia, are common in the first days of treatment. Akathisia may also emerge in a more subtle manor and persist undiagnosed. Chronic DIMDs occur after three or more months of treatment and may take the form of more subtle dystonia, tremor, and rigidity.
Tardive DIMD phenomenologies include dyskinesias, stereotypies, tics, dystonia, and oculogyric crises. The classic phenomenology of tardive dyskinesia is continuous stereotyped, choreoathetoid movements, complex orobuccolingual movements such as grimacing, lip smacking and puckering, and tongue protrusion or pushing it against the inside of the cheek. A question often arises of how to distinguish tardive dyskinesia from other types of involuntary movements disorder that commonly cooccur in children with autism or other complex neuropsychiatric disorders. Typically, the movements of tardive dyskinesia are continuous and cannot be suppressed with effort.
Dyskinesias of varying forms can develop in children when DRBAs are withdrawn or when dosage is reduced rapidly. This is termed the withdrawal emergent syndrome.
Much remains to be learned about the pathophysiology of DIMDs associated with dopamine receptor blocker use and how to predict and prevent them. , Analysis of pharmacokinetic data from the Clinical Antipsychotic Trials in Intervention Effectiveness (CATIE) study comparing risperidone, olanzapine, and ziprasidone supported a relationship between higher trough, but not peak, dopamine 2 receptor occupancy levels and risk for DIMDs.
The susceptibility to DIMDs in childhood may relate to a diathesis, or proneness to develop movement disorders prior to treatment. Genetic or epigenetic contributors to the neuropsychiatric symptoms may concurrently be risk factors for DIMDs. For example, in adults, stereotypies and other hyperkinetic movement disorders have been reported in young adults with schizophrenia for decades, prior to the availability of DRBAs. , Similarly, some general risk factors for tardive dyskinesia in adults, including older age, female sex, and being overweight, may also have biological relationships with risk factors for other psychiatric disorders. Interestingly, despite the not uncommon practice of treating severe tics with DRBAs, there are few reports of tardive dyskinesia in young adults with Tourette syndrome. Clinically, autism is more similar to schizophrenia, and in both disorders, DIMDs are seen quite commonly with DRBAs. The biological basis for apparent differences in susceptibility is unknown.
The pathophysiology of the risk for DIMDs may have an identifiable genetic component, although at this time most research in adults identifying genetic predispositions has been difficult to confirm and is not clinically actionable. , Commonly investigated candidates are genes for dopamine and other neurotransmitter receptors as well as drug-metabolizing enzymes. A comprehensive discussion of the genetic and environmental risk factors for tardive dyskinesia lies outside the scope of this chapter and; moreover, the most rigorous epidemiological and mechanistic research focuses on adults with schizophrenia. A study of over 600 Europeans with schizophrenia found no evidence that dopamine D2 receptor polymorphisms influence risk for DIMDs, whereas in other European cohorts evidence has been more supportive. Studies of other dopamine receptors have yielded similarly mixed results. Similarly, the data regarding risks related to poor- or intermediate- cytochrome P450 CYP2D6 metabolizer status has also been mixed. ,
Other studies suggest that genes involved in GABAergic pathways raise the risk for tardive dyskinesia. , Some studies support risk related to polymorphisms in serotonergic systems. Overactivation with selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs) may be more common in children with ASD. Polymorphisms in genes encoding receptors 2A or 2C , but not 3A may increase risk for DIMDs in DRBA-treated adults with schizophrenia.
Based on views that susceptibility to oxidative stress might be important, researchers have assessed glutathione-S-transferase, glutathione peroxidase, catalase, and tumor necrosis factor alpha polymorphisms, but found no association with hyperkinetic DIMDs. On a cellular basis, mechanisms may include long-term effects on dopamine receptor density and function, damage to GABAergic striatal neurons, and damage to cholinergic interneurons. Genome-wide association studies may identify unsuspected pathways as well. ,
Another line of research has investigated relationships between tardive dyskinesia risk and noncoding RNA—single nucleotide polymorphisms variants in microRNAs (miRNAs). MiRNA downregulates gene expression in brain and other organs through binding to their 3′ untranslated regions. In a case–control study of 1000 patients from Northern India with schizophrenia evaluating 33 candidate SNPs identified associations with MiRNA binding five genes, the strongest of which was SCN1A .
Diagnosis of an acute DIMD is usually straightforward, when the DRBA has been prescribed for a routine indication during the appropriate antecedent timeframe and the phenomenology is characteristic. In the case of accidental ingestion, the acute onset of a hyperkinetic or dystonic disorder in a toddler should raise the diagnostic possibility of ingestion of a DRBA.
Diagnosis of a chronic or tardive DIMD in children should be considered based on the phenomenology and time course of the movement disorder. This diagnosis can be more challenging than acute DIMDs. Often, at the time of the first neurologic consultation, the baseline, pretreatment neurological examination by the primary physician or prescribing psychiatrist is not well documented. The diagnosis of tardive syndrome should be suspected when hypokinetic or hyperkinetic movement disorder emerges after at least 3 months of exposure to DRBAs. Tardive syndrome is an umbrella term used to describe a variety of DIMDs differentiated by their unique and predominant phenomenology. , Thus tardive dyskinesia is typically manifested by orofacial-lingual stereotypies that resemble a chewing movement. This is phenomenologically distinct from complex motor stereotypies in children (See Chapter 8 ).
Retrocollis and opisthotonic posturing are the classic manifestations of tardive dystonia, but cranial (e.g., blepharospasm) and oromandibular dystonia may be also present. This is more common in males. Features that tend to distinguish this from primary dystonia include older age, association with other hyperkinetic movements, and lack of alleviating maneuvers such as sensory tricks.
In tardive tourettism, the patient exhibits motor and/or phonic tics and other features of Tourette syndrome. Tic disorders usually begin prior to the age of 10 years, so in the setting of chronic neuroleptic use, new tics after that age of 10 years may raise suspicion. However, in established tic disorders, this can be more challenging as new tics continue to emerge in adolescence. Moreover, functional tic-like movements may also appear in adolescence. , These factors can make judging whether tics are emerging as DIMDs challenging.
Other tardive syndromes may present with akathisia, tremor, or myoclonus. Tardive akathisia refers to motor and sensory restlessness with an urge to move and inability to remain still. , Tardive pain, particularly involving mouth, tongue, and the genital region may be also a manifestation of tardive syndrome. When a new movement disorder occurs at the time of medication tapering or discontinuation, withdrawal emergent syndrome should be considered as a possibility. However, if symptoms are mild, then the differential diagnosis includes hyperkinetic movements that may have been masked during treatment with the DRBA. Resuming the prior medication and dose and reducing the medication dose at a slower rate can help clarify the diagnosis.
There are ethical and legal considerations involved in iatrogenic disorders that are important to consider, although they are not unique to iatrogenic movement disorders or to DRBAs. Thus, topics described here can be applied to other classes of prescribed medications. A brief overview is placed here based on a relatively higher prevalence of DIMDs among children where DRBAs are prescribed, and due to concerns about permanent tardive movement disorders.
DIMDs, like other iatrogenic conditions, are a sensitive topic given the bioethical principle of nonmaleficence as well as concerns about litigation and liability. In the case of medications used for psychiatric diagnoses, this can seem especially morally fraught, as the diagnoses and symptoms are based on subjective ratings of multiple observers. It is important for clinicians to be vigilant, but humble, and to revisit the rationale for the prescribing decision as well as the broader social and scientific context relating to these classes of medications.
Decisions to prescribe psychiatric medications to children and adolescents involve some special challenges but also some considerations shared with other types of prescribing decisions. First, much prescribing of medication for central nervous system diagnoses is, necessarily, “off-label” (done outside the realm of US FDA-approved indications). Second, and related to the first point, the availability of high-quality, statistically robust clinical trial data for making clinical decisions for children is limited. This results from complex factors including the challenges to both validity and generalizability of clinical trial results arising from ill-defined symptom-based DSM5 categorical diagnoses, inconvenience or impracticality resulting in low incentives for families to participate in intensive clinical trials, understandable parental fears about both active investigational drugs and the risks of randomization to placebo, societal concerns about ethical issues of clinical trials in special populations, and economic disincentives for pharmaceutical companies due to the high risk and costs of pediatric clinical trials. Third, there are inherent risks in medical treatments of all kinds, and psychiatric disorders are no different. Prescriptions of DRBAs are ideally provided after considering the very significant risk to the child and family of not treating. Fourth, in many cases, even with better knowledge of iatrogenic risks than we have now, the substantial impact of psychiatric illnesses means that the benefit/risk ratio often still would favor treatment. Fifth, while medication use in pediatric psychiatric disorders should be part of a comprehensive treatment plan that includes appropriate behavioral therapies, the reality is that access to comprehensive behavioral health care for many families is limited by costs, insurance coverage, and access to providers with appropriate pediatric training.
In addition to worrying about their child, caregivers in this setting may have other emotions such as guilt or anger. It is helpful for the clinician to review with caregivers the factors above, when applicable, as elements of reasonable medical decisions. This may reduce caregiver guilt and/or blaming of the initial prescriber. In the end, it is most often the case that the neurologist will want to collaborate with a psychiatrist in management of the patient until the DIMD resolves.
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