RESUMO
Tardive dyskinesia is a potentially permanent and disfiguring side effect associated with the use of conventional, or first generation, antipsychotics. Quetiapine is a second generation antipsychotic with transient dopamine receptor occupancy, a property shared with clozapine. Quetiapine was administered to a patient who had persistent choreoathetoid movements that developed during treatment with conventional antipsychotics and remained unimproved during longterm treatment with risperidone. During 10 weeks of monotherapy with quetiapine, his Abnormal Involuntary Movement Scale score fell from 11 to 3. He was subsequently switched back to risperidone and his movements returned. The addition of quetiapine to his risperidone regimen once again resulted in a decrease of his tardive dyskinesia symptoms. The mechanism by which quetiapine improved tardive dyskinesia symptoms in this patient is not known, but differential treatment effects between the novel antipsychotics may exist. Controlled trials of quetiapine in the treatment of tardive dyskinesia should be pursued.