Cochrane Summariesbeta

Independent high-quality evidence for health care decision making

Non-neuroleptic catecholaminergic drugs for neuroleptic-induced tardive dyskinesia

El-Sayeh HGG, Lyra da Silva JP, Rathbone J, Soares-Weiser K
Published Online: 
May 12, 2010

Tardive dyskinesia is a disfiguring and disabling movement disorder which is often caused by drugs used to treat schizophrenia. Several of the Cochrane reviews have summarised the effects of the many treatments used to manage these involuntary movements and this one summarises the trials-based evidence of a group of compounds which are known to influence a specific set of brain chemicals called the catecholaminergic system.

For this review we only found two short small studies with only one outcome which was 'leaving the study early'. We did not find any useful information for measures of tardive dyskinesia, mental state and adverse effects. We cannot recommend these drugs (non-neuroleptic catecholaminergics) as a treatment intervention for tardive dyskinesia. Their use is purely experimental.

Find the research