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Acute dystonia and dyskinesia progressing in the patient with fibromyalgia upon the use of duloxetine

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  23 March 2020

C. Tüz*
Affiliation:
Erenköy FTR Hastanesi, Psychiatry, Istanbul, Turkey

Abstract

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Purpose

In this article, a case who was prescribed duloxetine (30 mg capsule) upon the fibromyalgia diagnosis by a physical therapist and had acute dystonia and dyskinesia after approximately 1.5 hours from duloxetine intake shall be presented.

Case

It was learnt that a married female patient aged 38 consulted a physical therapist with the complaint of back pain and duloxetine (30 mg capsule) was prescribed. It was reported that, the patient applied to our hospital with the compliant of involuntary movements around the mouth, on the lips and neck, spasm, inability to open the mouth completely, spasm in jaw, gritting teeth, mumbling and aphasia after approximately 1.5 hours from her duloxetine intake. The patient was conscious. Her psychomotor activity was natural. As a result of cranial MR, EEG, BT examinations hemogram and the routine biochemistry examinations, any abnormality in zinc and iron levels was not detected. Complaints of the patient regressed after 1 hour from the discontinuance of duloxetine and the administration of biperiden 5 mg/mL ampoule 1000 cm3 in SF. After 72 hours, any symptoms were not found.

Discussion

Dopamine neurotransmission can be inhibited through the increase in serotonin and norepinephrine. Additionally, dystonia may originate from the prevailing of noradrenaline as a result of the failure of dopaminergic–noradrenergic balance.

Disclosure of interest

The author has not supplied his/her declaration of competing interest.

Type
EV1336
Copyright
Copyright © European Psychiatric Association 2016

References

Leo, R.J. Movement disorders associated with the serotonin selective reuptake inhibitors. J Clin Psychiatry 1996 57:10.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Karakaş Uğurlu, G., et al. Acute dystonia after using sigle dose duloxetine: case report. Psychiatry Unvestig 2013; 10: 9597.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
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