학술논문

Glossopharyngeal Dystonia Secondary to a Lurasidone-Fluoxetine CYP-3A4 Interaction.
Document Type
Article
Source
Case Reports in Psychiatry. 2013, p1-3. 3p.
Subject
*GLOSSOPHARYNGEAL nerve
*FLUOXETINE
*ANTIPSYCHOTIC agents
*DYSTONIA
*DRUG interactions
*TERMINALLY ill
*GENETICS
*PATIENTS
Language
ISSN
2090-682X
Abstract
Acute dystonic reactions are becoming much less prevalent in clinical practice due to the use of newer antipsychotics. Drug-drug interactions, patient characteristics, and environmental and genetic factors all contribute to the rate of occurrence of acute dystonia with second generation agents. In this case, we report a glossopharyngeal dystonia secondary to a lurasidone-fluoxetine CYP-3A4 interaction to highlight the importance of maintaining an index of suspicion for laryngeal dystonia, a potentially fatal dystonia. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]