Sudden-Onset Dystonia in a Patient Taking Asenapine: Interaction Between Ciprofloxacin and Asenapine Metabolism
A 44-year-old nonsmoking single white woman with a history of bipolar I disorder was admitted for worsening depressed mood. She had been treated with 5 mg h.s. of asenapine for 1.5 months prior to admission. Her history included a severe dystonic reaction to haloperidol. Home medications were continued and included 20 mg/day of baclofen, 60 mg/day of dexlansoprazole, 20 mg/day of fluoxetine, 1 mg/day of lorazepam, and 2,250 mg/day of divalproex. For treatment of a urinary tract infection, 500 mg b.i.d. of ciprofloxacin was initiated at admission. Thirty-three hours after starting ciprofloxacin, the patient was noted to be unable to close her jaw, consistent with an acute dystonic reaction. She was given 50 mg of diphenhydramine intramuscularly, and the dystonia resolved. Ciprofloxacin was discontinued and switched to 100 mg b.i.d. of nitrofurantoin, and asenapine was continued with no further complications at the time of discharge.
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