5-Minute Clinical Consult

Neuroleptic Malignant Syndrome

Neuroleptic Malignant Syndrome was found in 5-Minute Clinical Consult which helps you diagnose, treat, and follow up on over 900 medical conditions seen in everyday practice.

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Basics

Description

  • Life-threatening condition that may develop anytime during therapy with neuroleptics; most cases develop within the 1st 2 weeks of starting 1 of these medications.
  • Non-neuroleptic medications that have antidopaminergic activity have also been implicated.
  • Characterized by muscular rigidity due to dopamine antagonism in the nigrostriatal pathway
  • Hyperthermia from the blockage of hypothalamic thermoregulation (more likely in the setting of benzodiazepine withdrawal)
  • Autonomic dysfunction
  • Altered mental status
  • May be indistinguishable from other causes of drug-induced hyperthermia (e.g., malignant hyperthermia, serotonin syndrome, lethal catatonia, anticholinergic toxins, or sympathomimetic poisoning); detailed history can help differentiate between these causes

Epidemiology


Incidence
  • Variably reported from prospective studies as 0.01–3%
  • 2,000 new cases annually in the US
  • Predominant sex: Male > Female
  • Predominant age: <40 years

Prevalence
0.15% ± 0.05% among patients receiving neuroleptics

Risk Factors

  • Newly administered medication/rapid increase in the dose of an existing agent
  • IM or depot administration of medications
  • Concurrent use of multiple neuroleptic agents
  • Administration of neuroleptics with other drugs known to cause neuroleptic malignant syndrome (NMS), such as lithium
  • Previous episodes of NMS
  • Exposure to heat
  • Dehydration/Malnutrition
  • Use of psychoactive agents
  • Presence of an underlying structural/functional brain disorder (tumor, encephalitis, delirium/dementia)
  • Postpartum women may be at an increased risk of developing NMS.
Genetics
  • Some studies show a genetic predisposition to NMS.
  • Polymorphisms: Loss of del allele in 141C Ins/Del of the dopamine D2 receptor gene and Ser9Gly in the dopamine D3 receptor gene

Pathophysiology

  • Exact mechanism unknown
  • Most likely due to central dopaminergic blockade of nigrostriatal, hypothalamic, mesocortical/limbic pathways
  • Certain theories suggest a role of sympathoadrenal hyperactivity; defects in neuronal calcium regulatory proteins may also contribute to the pathogenesis.

Etiology

  • Most commonly seen in treatment with typical neuroleptics: Phenothiazines (e.g., fluphenazine), butyrophenones (e.g., haloperidol), and thiothixene
  • May also be seen with atypical antipsychotics (e.g., clozapine, risperidone, olanzapine) (1,2)
  • Nonneuroleptic agents with anti–dopaminergic activity (e.g., metoclopramide, promethazine and droperidol) have also been implicated.
  • Rare cases have occurred with usage of medications not known to have any central anti-dopaminergic activity (e.g., lithium, phenelzine and desipramine).
  • Also associated with withdrawal from dopamine agonists in Parkinson disease, CNS shunt failure, and functional hemispherectomy (3)

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