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. 1989;98(4):564-6.
doi: 10.1007/BF00441962.

Rats administered chronic neuroleptics develop oral movements which are similar in form to those in humans with tardive dyskinesia

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Rats administered chronic neuroleptics develop oral movements which are similar in form to those in humans with tardive dyskinesia

G Ellison et al. Psychopharmacology (Berl). 1989.

Abstract

Oral movements (OMs) in rats chronically administered haloperidol (HAL), fluphenazine (FLU), or no drug were recorded using a computerized video analysis system which measured the distance between two fluorescent dots painted above and below the rat's mouth. The resulting data was analyzed using fast-fourier analysis. Following an initial period of sedation (decreased energy at all frequencies), the drugged animals (and especially the FLU animals) began to show increased oral movements of 1-2 Hz, an effect which increased substantially upon drug withdrawal. This is precisely the altered energy spectrum observed in humans with tardive dyskinesia.

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References

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