항정신병약물에 의한 안구운동발작과 발작성 지각변화 증후군Antipsychotic-Induced Oculogyric Crisis and Paroxysmal Perceptual Alteration
- Other Titles
- Antipsychotic-Induced Oculogyric Crisis and Paroxysmal Perceptual Alteration
- Authors
- 정인원; 김임열; 윤탁; 정성훈; 정희연; 김용식
- Issue Date
- Apr-2018
- Publisher
- 대한조현병학회
- Keywords
- Schizophrenia; Antipsychotics; Oculogyric crisis; Paroxysmal perceptual alteration; 항정신병 약물; 안구운동발작; 발작성 지각변화 증후군.
- Citation
- 대한조현병학회지, v.21, no.1, pp 9 - 20
- Pages
- 12
- Indexed
- KCICANDI
- Journal Title
- 대한조현병학회지
- Volume
- 21
- Number
- 1
- Start Page
- 9
- End Page
- 20
- URI
- https://scholarworks.dongguk.edu/handle/sw.dongguk/9573
- ISSN
- 2287-6995
2671-7786
- Abstract
- During antipsychotic drug treatment, clinicians occasionally encounter sudden attacks of oculogyric crisis (OGC) and/or paroxysmal perceptual alteration (PPA) which occur mostly in the afternoon or early evening lasting for minutes to hours and are eventually remitted with rests or short sleep and/or medications such as benzodiazepines, anticholinergics and so forth. Moreover, these attacks are usually accompanied with psychiatric symptoms such as various modalities of hallucinations and illusions, delusions, obsessive thoughts, panic attacks, agitation as well as autonomic symptoms. These accompanying psychiatric symptoms can be perceived as a worsening of psychiatric symptoms if the clinician does not understand the symptoms due to the side effects of antipsychotic drugs, which may result in increasing the dosage of antipsychotics instead of reducing doses or switching to less offending drugs. On the other hand, patients could easily recognize the symptoms as the adverse effects of drugs. This literature review and case-series study is aimed to raise awareness of OGC and PPA by providing clinical cases and author’s views with the literature reviews about concepts, recognitions and managements from the works of Japanese authors who first reported the clinical importance of these attacks, particularly PPA.
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Collections - Graduate School > Department of Medicine > 1. Journal Articles

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