Health

Myths and Facts About Tardive Dyskinesia

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Antipsychotic drugs are mostly used to manage psychosis and symptoms such as delusions (false beliefs) and hallucinations (seeing or hearing things that others don’t), according to the National Institute of Mental Health (NIMH). The drugs are often prescribed to treat bipolar disorder, schizophrenia, and schizoaffective disorder.

These medications can also be used in combination with other drugs to treat mental health conditions, according to the NIMH, such as:

Antipsychotics work by blocking dopamine receptors in the brain, according to Cleveland Clinic. Dopamine is a neurotransmitter that not only helps control the part of the brain that signals reward and pleasure but also plays a big role in coordinating muscle movements.

Other medications that can cause tardive dyskinesia include antidepressants, antiemetics (used for severe nausea and acid reflux), and anxiolytics (used to treat anxiety), according to the National Organization for Tardive Dyskinesia.

The severity of tardive dyskinesia varies widely from person to person. Some people may not even be aware they’re experiencing involuntary movements, nor are they bothered by them, says Nucifora. Other people, though, may develop speech, swallowing, and even breathing problems, he says.

“For more severe tardive dyskinesia, people will seek help,” says Nucifora. “But many people accept tardive dyskinesia as part of their illness.”

Because tardive dyskinesia can look and feel different for each person, there are many misconceptions about the condition, and it can be difficult to separate the myths from the facts. Here are some truths and misunderstandings about this movement disorder.

Fact: The Risk of Developing Tardive Dyskinesia Increases the Longer You Take an Antipsychotic

Tardive dyskinesia primarily occurs as a side effect of long-term use of antipsychotics, according to NAMI. And, says Nucifora, higher doses of an antipsychotic can increase the risk of developing the condition.

Even though tardive dyskinesia typically appears after years of using a medication, it can also happen after taking it for only months, or even as little as one day, according to the National Organization for Tardive Dyskinesia.

Because tardive dyskinesia is linked to long-term use of antipsychotics, NAMI recommends that people taking these medications be closely monitored and screened by doctors. In fact, a review reported that the best way to treat tardive dyskinesia is with prevention, cautioning clinicians to limit prescriptions of certain drugs and minimize the duration of therapy.

Myth: People Who Develop Tardive Dyskinesia Should Stop Taking Their Medicine ASAP

Although you should talk to your doctor right away about any involuntary movements you’re experiencing, you shouldn’t stop taking the drug on your own, says Anhar Hassan, MB, BCh, a consultant neurologist at Beacon Hospital in Dublin.

Halting medication without speaking to your doctor first can be risky, she says. Abruptly stopping antipsychotics can trigger a recurrence of psychiatric symptoms or even withdrawal symptoms.

If your physician decides to change your current medication, the tardive dyskinesia may stop, says Dr. Hassan. And even if the symptoms don’t go away completely, says Nucifora, the progression of the disorder may be halted or slowed by switching drugs.

Myth: There Is No Way to Treat the Symptoms of Tardive Dyskinesia

Two drugs, deutetrabenazine (Austedo) and valbenazine (Ingrezza), are approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration to treat tardive dyskinesia specifically.

The drugs suppress symptoms of tardive dyskinesia, but they do not cure it. And symptoms can recur if the drugs are stopped.

Myth: Only the ‘Older’ Antipsychotics Cause Tardive Dyskinesia

Doctors refer to different groups of antipsychotic drugs as first generation (or typical), second generation (or atypical), and third generation (dopamine receptor partial agonists).

People who take first-generation antipsychotics are more likely to develop tardive dyskinesia than those who take second-generation antipsychotics, says Nucifora, but the latter class of medications can still cause it.

According to a review, there may also be an increased risk of tardive dyskinesia with third-generation antipsychotics.

Fact: Certain Risk Factors Can Increase Your Chance of Developing Tardive Dyskinesia

Although there is no medical consensus on exactly what causes tardive dyskinesia to occur, there are several risk factors that seem to make some people more likely to develop the condition.

Those include being older, being female, and having the illness longer, according to a review, as well as diabetes, smoking, and misuse of alcohol or other substances.

Other risk factors associated with tardive dyskinesia include the use of dopamine-blocking medications; taking the stronger or older versions of dopamine-blocking medications — like haloperidol (Haldol); a history of prior movement disorders while using dopamine-blocking medications; a genetic predisposition to tardive dyskinesia; and brain developmental disorders, says Hassan.

If you are taking a medication that may cause tardive dyskinesia and have one or more of these risk factors, talk to your doctor about your concerns, says Hassan.

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