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A False Case of Clozapine‐Resistant Schizophrenia
Journal article

A False Case of Clozapine‐Resistant Schizophrenia

Abstract

One of the subjects that most concerns physicians is treatment-resistance. About 30%-60% of schizophrenia patients do not respond adequately to antipsychotic treatment and are known as refractory schizophrenia patients. Clozapine has been the drug of choice in such cases. However, approximately 30% of them do not respond to clozapine either. Here, we describe a patient with an initial diagnosis of refractory schizophrenia who had a history of dramatic aggressiveness. However, in this case, "refractoriness" was a wrong diagnosis. A case of psychosis secondary to epilepsy had been treated as schizophrenia for almost 20 years. Reports like this one are important because they remind us of how a thorough investigation can lead to the correct diagnosis and improve the patient's prognosis.

Authors

Maia-de-Oliveira JP; Pinto JP; Alexandre V; Machado-de-Sousa JP; Morais SL; Chaves C; Sakamoto AC; Zuardi AW; Crippa JAS; Hallak JE

Journal

Case Reports in Medicine, Vol. 2010, No. 1,

Publisher

Hindawi

Publication Date

January 1, 2010

DOI

10.1155/2010/534027

ISSN

1687-9627

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