Mazurek M F, Rosebush P I
Department of Psychiatry, McMaster University Medical Centre, Hamilton, Ont., Canada.
Am J Psychiatry. 1996 May;153(5):708-10. doi: 10.1176/ajp.153.5.708.
This study examined the timing of acute dystonic reactions in 200 patients taking neuroleptic medication for the first time.
Two hundred patients received a twice-daily regimen of low-dose neuroleptic.
Over 80% of the episodes of acute dystonia occurred between 12:00 noon and 11:00 p.m. The observed circadian variation was not accounted for by sleep, fatigue, or time elapsed from the last dose of medication.
The finding of a diurnal pattern in one of the recognized side effects of neuroleptic medication suggests that the therapeutic efficacy of neuroleptics might similarly vary over the course of the day.