- Author:
Hyun Woong PARK
1
;
Jae Ryung KWAK
;
Ji Sook LEE
Author Information
- Publication Type:Original Article
- Keywords: Pharmaceutical preparations; Dystonia; Child
- MeSH: Antiemetics; Antipsychotic Agents; Benzodiazepines; Child; Diagnosis; Dystonia*; Emergencies; Emergency Service, Hospital; Humans; Medical Records; Movement Disorders; Muscles; Pharmaceutical Preparations; Physical Examination; Prescriptions; Prognosis
- From: Clinical and Experimental Emergency Medicine 2017;4(3):133-137
- CountryRepublic of Korea
- Language:English
- Abstract: OBJECTIVE: Dystonia is a movement disorder in which muscles contract uncontrollably. Acute drug-induced dystonia (DID) can be diagnosed through detailed history taking and physical examination. This study aimed to identify the clinical characteristics of DID in children, which could help emergency physicians diagnose these conditions more efficiently. METHODS: We reviewed medical records of children aged below 18 years diagnosed with drug-related dystonia after discharge from the emergency department over 10 years. We collected the patients’ age, sex, suspected causative drugs, initial diagnosis of the prescribing physician, duration of drug-taking, diagnostic evaluations, treatment methods, and prognosis. RESULTS: Seventy-nine patients were enrolled. The mean age was 11.3±4.9 years (range, 4.0 months to 18.0 years), and 41 patients (51.9%) were boys. The most common cause of DID was gastrointestinal medications in 45 patients (57.0%), followed by antipsychotics in 23 patients (29.1%). Eleven (24.4%) out of 45 patients with DID due to gastrointestinal medications had the initial diagnosis of upper respiratory infection, and seven (30.4%) out of 23 patients with DID due to antipsychotics had the initial diagnosis of non-psychotic diseases. Younger children received more diagnostic procedures and were more frequently admitted. A benzodiazepine (67.1%) was the most common single drug for treatment. CONCLUSION: Physicians should not only acknowledge DID in order to reduce unnecessary workup and admission, but also know that antiemetics and antipsychotics are common causes of DID. Therefore, physicians should try to avoid multidrug prescriptions in children.