Title : Pharmacologic characteristics of Meige dystonia: differentiation from tardive dyskinesia - Stahl_1982_J.Clin.Psychiatry_43_445 |
Author(s) : Stahl SM , Yesavage JA , Berger PA |
Ref : J Clin Psychiatry , 43 :445 , 1982 |
Abstract :
Idiopathic orofacial dyskinesia, also called Brueghel's syndrome, blepharospasm-oromandibular dystonia, and Meige dystonia, is characterized by involuntary facial movements. Since this disorder can be difficult to distinguish from tardive dyskinesia, we have generated a neuropharmacologic profile of Meige dystonia. Symptoms were improved by antagonists of both dopamine and acetylcholine and worsened by the cholinergic agonist physostigmine, consistent with a hypothesis of relative excess in both dopamine and acetylcholine neuronal activities. Since tardive dyskinesia is hypothesized to be characterized by dopamine excess and acetylcholine deficiency, a physostigmine infusion may help differentiate these two disorders by exacerbating Meige dystonia but improving tardive dyskinesia. |
PubMedSearch : Stahl_1982_J.Clin.Psychiatry_43_445 |
PubMedID: 7174619 |
Stahl SM, Yesavage JA, Berger PA (1982)
Pharmacologic characteristics of Meige dystonia: differentiation from tardive dyskinesia
J Clin Psychiatry
43 :445
Stahl SM, Yesavage JA, Berger PA (1982)
J Clin Psychiatry
43 :445