lurasidone-hydrochloride has been researched along with Syndrome* in 3 studies
1 trial(s) available for lurasidone-hydrochloride and Syndrome
Article | Year |
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Sleep Disturbance, Irritability, and Response to Lurasidone Treatment in Children and Adolescents with Bipolar Depression.
The presence of mixed (subsyndromal hypomanic) symptoms may influence treatment outcomes in pediatric bipolar depression. This post-hoc analysis investigated "bridge" symptoms that have cross-sectional and predictive associations with depressive and manic symptom clusters in youth with bipolar depression.. The moderating effects of these bridge symptoms on the response to flexibly dosed lurasidone 20-80 mg/d compared to placebo treatment was analyzed in children and adolescents with bipolar I depression in a six-week, placebo-controlled, double-blind study followed by a 2-year, openlabel extension study of lurasidone.. Sleep disturbances, assessed by "difficulty with sleep" (Children's Depression Rating Scale, Revised [CDRS-R] item 4) and "decreased need for sleep" (Young Mania Rating Scale [YMRS] item 4), and "irritability" (CDRS-R item-8, YMRS item 5) were identified as "bridge" symptoms and found to have replicable causal associations with depressive (CDRS-R total) and manic symptom clusters (YMRS total) at baseline and week-6. A greater improvement in overall depression severity at week 6 with lurasidone (vs. placebo) treatment was observed in the presence (vs. absence) of decreased need for sleep at study baseline, mediated in part by significant reductions from study baseline in decreased need for sleep and manic symptom severity. The absence of sleep disturbance and irritability in patients at open-label extension study baseline was associated with higher rates of sustained recovery (symptomatic and functional remission) over 6 months compared to patients with those symptoms at baseline (68% vs. 50%, Number Needed to Treat=6).. Our findings suggest that sleep disturbance and irritability are cardinal symptoms that "bridge" between depressive and manic symptom clusters and influence treatment outcomes in youth with bipolar depression. Topics: Adolescent; Antipsychotic Agents; Bipolar Disorder; Child; Cross-Sectional Studies; Double-Blind Method; Humans; Lurasidone Hydrochloride; Syndrome; Treatment Outcome | 2023 |
2 other study(ies) available for lurasidone-hydrochloride and Syndrome
Article | Year |
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Lurasidone-Induced Rabbit Syndrome: A Case Report.
Topics: Adult; Antipsychotic Agents; Depressive Disorder, Major; Dyskinesia, Drug-Induced; Female; Humans; Lurasidone Hydrochloride; Syndrome | 2017 |
Risperidone-induced Pisa syndrome in MS: resolution with lurasidone and recurrence with Chlorpromazine.
To report a case of risperidone-induced Pisa syndrome in a patient with multiple sclerosis (MS) that resolved with lurasidone, recurred with chlorpromazine, and was complicated by possible drug-drug interactions.. A 31-year-old white male with MS developed Pisa syndrome after years of treatment with risperidone at varying doses for behavioral symptoms associated with pervasive developmental disorder. The patient experienced improvement in symptoms after treatment was switched to lurasidone; however, due to psychiatric decompensation, a switch to chlorpromazine was made and Pisa syndrome recurred. To maintain control of the patient's behavioral symptoms, chlorpromazine was not discontinued.. Pisa syndrome is a rare adverse drug reaction induced most often by neuroleptic medications. The reaction is characterized by dystonia affecting cervical and lumbar musculature, resulting in flexion of the head and body to one side with axial rotation of the trunk. The etiology is believed to involve a dopaminergic-cholinergic imbalance. Most practitioners are not familiar with this syndrome, and it has not been reported previously in a patient with MS. Definitive diagnostic criteria and treatment have not been established. We identified 15 case reports involving risperidone, paliperidone, chlorpromazine, clomipramine, or valproic acid. The time to development of Pisa syndrome, patient demographics, dosing and titration of causative medications, approach to treatment, and resolution of Pisa syndrome varied widely in these reports. Dystonia in MS often presents differently than Pisa syndrome. The Naranjo probability scale indicated a probable relationship between either risperidone or chlorpromazine in each instance of Pisa syndrome in our patient.. Pisa syndrome is a rare adverse drug reaction associated with neuroleptic medications. Our report highlights the importance of identifying this uncommon type of dystonia in order to consider modification of the medication regimen when appropriate. Topics: Adult; Antipsychotic Agents; Child Development Disorders, Pervasive; Chlorpromazine; Gait Ataxia; Humans; Isoindoles; Lurasidone Hydrochloride; Male; Multiple Sclerosis; Recurrence; Risperidone; Syndrome; Thiazoles | 2013 |