Anticholinergics are effective for some drug-induced movement disorders and not others because the mechanisms differ. Though patients may present with similar symptoms, not all drug-induced movement ...
—According to new research, oral vertical dyskinesia (OVD), also known by the older term “rabbit syndrome,” may be part of a spectrum of symptoms of drug-induced parkinsonism and tardive dyskinesia, ...
Please provide your email address to receive an email when new articles are posted on . Neurocrine Biosciences Inc. recently presented data on comorbidities, polypharmacy and treatment patterns of ...
Tardive dyskinesia is a medication-induced movement disorder that causes uncontrollable muscle movements in the face, neck, and limbs. Symptoms may continue even after stopping the medication. Tardive ...
April 30 (Reuters) - (This April 30 story has been corrected to say it was Neurocrine's movement disorder drug, not Huntington's disease drug, in the headline and to remove the reference to chorea in ...
Accurate and early diagnosis of tardive dyskinesia (TD), a serious movement disorder typically caused by exposure to antipsychotic medications, is imperative for long-term management. "Keeping an eye ...
Akathisia is a common movement disorder associated with the use of antipsychotic medications. Ladislav Hakovec, a neuropathology professor at the University of Prague, coined the word akathisia as a ...
Tardive dyskinesia, or TD, is a drug-induced movement disorder that can occur in individuals taking certain medications that block dopamine receptors in the brain. Most commonly, cases of TD are ...
Differentiating tardive dyskinesia from other movement disorders can be challenging. "One major criterion is the history of exposure to neuroleptic medications," said Jeff Bronstein, MD, PhD, of the ...