PMID: 6106258Jan 1, 1980Paper

The prevalence of presumed tardive dyskinesia in psychiatric inpatients and outpatients

Psychopharmacology
J KaneP Ramsey

Abstract

Randomly selected psychiatric patients (271 total) were examined by raters blind to diagnosis and treatment history for the presence of abnormal movements. The prevalence of presumed tardive dyskinesia among neuroleptic-exposed patients was 4.6%. If minimal rating scale criteria were applied, 9% of those patients with no history of neuroleptic exposure might have been given 'presumptive' diagnoses of dyskinesia. Problems in establishing diagnostic criteria are discussed and a longitudinal approach toward validating diagnoses is recommended.

References

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Citations

Jan 1, 1983·Psychopharmacology·B WistedtA Jørgensen
Feb 1, 1986·Biological Psychiatry·T KolakowskaM A Reveley
Dec 17, 1981·European Journal of Pharmacology·C H MisraR C Smith
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Mar 1, 1990·QRB. Quality Review Bulletin·D T Blair

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