Neurological Side Effects of Antipsychotic Drugs Acute dystonia - Spasm of muscles of tongue, face, neck, back • Time: 1-5 days. Young, antipsychotic, naive patients at highest risk • Tx: Antiparkinsonian agents are diagnostic and curative Akathisia - Subjective and objective restlessness; not anxiety or "agitation" • Time: 5-60 days • Tx: Reduce dose or change drug; clonazepam, propranolol more effective than antiparkinsonian agents Parkinsonism - Bradykinesia, rigidity, variable tremor, mask facies, shuffling gait • Time: 5-30 days. Elderly at greatest risk • Tx: Dose reduction; change medication; antiparkinsonian agent Neuroleptic malignant syndrome - Extreme rigidity, fever, unstable blood pressure, myoglobinemia; can be fatal • Time: weeks-months. Can persist for days after stopping antipsychotic • Tx: Stop antipsychotic immediately; supportive care; dantrolene and bromocriptine Perioral tremor ("rabbit syndrome") - Perioral tremor (may be a late variant of parkinsonism) • Time: months or years of treatment • Tx: Antiparkinsonian agents often help Tardive dyskinesia - Orofacial dyskinesia; rarely widespread choreoathetosis or dystonia • Time: months or years of treatment. • Tx: May be reversible with early recognition and drug discontinuation VMAT2 inhibitors valbenazine and deutetrabenazine are FDA-approved for TD #Antipsychotic #Drugs #Medications #SideEffects #pharmacology #management