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Akathisia: Prevalence and risk factors in patients with psychosis and bipolar disorder

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  23 March 2020

L. Jouini
Affiliation:
Razi hospital, “A” psychiatry department, Tunis, Tunisia
U. Ouali
Affiliation:
Razi hospital, “A” psychiatry department, Tunis, Tunisia
S. Ouanes
Affiliation:
Lausanne university hospital, old age psychiatry, Tunis, Tunisia
Z. Rania
Affiliation:
Razi hospital, psychiatry outpatient unit, Tunis, Tunisia
R. Jomli
Affiliation:
Razi hospital, “A” psychiatry department, Tunis, Tunisia
Y. Zgueb
Affiliation:
Razi hospital, “A” psychiatry department, Tunis, Tunisia
F. Nacef
Affiliation:
Razi hospital, “A” psychiatry department, Tunis, Tunisia

Abstract

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Introduction

Akathisia is probably the most common and one of the most distressing of the movement disorders associated with antipsychotic drugs. Little is known about its prevalence and its risk factors in real-world psychotic and bipolar patients to date.

Objectives

The main objective of this study was to determine the prevalence of akathisia and to determine the risk factors and the treatments associated with it in a sample of Tunisian patients with schizophrenia, schizoaffective or bipolar disorder.

Methods

Seventy-four patients with schizophrenia, schizoaffective or bipolar disorder were included and assessed with a validated scale: the Barnes Akathisia scale (BAS). Ongoing psychotropic treatments were recorded.

Results

The global prevalence of akathisia (as defined by a score ≥ 2 on the global akathisia subscale of the BAS) was 20.5%. Akathisia was significantly more common in patients with schizophrenia or schizoaffective disorder than in patients with Bipolar disorder (27.5% vs 9.4%; P = 0.049). However, the prevalence of akathisia did not differ according to sex, age, the illness duration, the presence of a comorbid anxiety disorder, the number of antipsychotics used, the type of the used antipsychotic (first vs second-generation), the antipsychotic chlorpromazine-equivalent total dosage, the use of benzodiazepines or anticholinergics, or the reported drug compliance.

Conclusions

Akathisia seems to be more common in some psychiatric disorders than in others such as schizophrenia or schizoaffective disorder. Longitudinal studies would be required to draw any firm conclusions concerning the factors involved in the emergence of akathisia.

Disclosure of interest

The authors have not supplied their declaration of competing interest.

Type
e-Poster Walk: Ethics and psychiatry/Philosophy and psychiatry/Others–Part 1
Copyright
Copyright © European Psychiatric Association 2017
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