BrandonSMcClellandHAProtheroeC. A study of facial dyskinesia in a mental hospital population. British Journal of Psychiatry1971; 118: 171–184.
3.
BaldessariniRJ. Clinical and epidemiologic aspects of tardive dyskinesia. Journal of Clinical Psychiatry1985; 46: 8–13.
4.
GervinMBrowneSLaneA. Spontaneous abnormal involuntary movements in first-episode schizophrenia and schizophreniform disorder: Baseline rate in a group of patients from an Irish catchment area. American Journal of Psychiatry1998; 155: 1202–1206.
5.
JesteDVPotkinSGSinhaSFederSWyattRJ. Tardive dyskinesia: Reversible and persistent. Archives of General Psychiatry1979; 36: 585–590.
6.
RogersD. The motor disorders of severe psychiatric illness: A conflict of paradigms. British Journal of Psychiatry1985; 147: 221–232.
7.
Tardive Dyskinesia Task Force. Tardive Dyskinesia: A Task Force Report of the American Psychiatric Association. American Psychiatric Association, Washington, DC1992.
8.
FentonWSBlylerCRWyattRJMcGlashanTH. Prevalence of spontaneous dyskinesia in schizophrenic and non-schizophrenic psychiatric patients. British Journal of Psychiatry1997; 171: 265–268.
9.
National Institute of Mental Health. Abnormal Involuntary Movements Scale. Public Health Service, Bethesda, Maryland1974.
10.
SimpsonGMAngusJWS. A rating scale for extrapyramidal side effects. Acta Psychiatrica Scandinavica1970; 212: 11–19, Suppl..
11.
BarnesTRE. A rating scale for drug-induced akathisia. British Journal of Psychiatry1989; 154: 672–676.
12.
GervinMBrowneSLaneA. Spontaneous dyskinesia in first episode schizophrenia/schizophreniform psychosis. Schizophrenia Research. ColoradoUSA1997; 24: 270, Special Issue, Abstracts of the VIth International Congress on Schizophrenia Research.
13.
LoebelADLiebermanJAAlvirJMJMayerhoffDIGeislerSHSzymanskiSR. Duration of psychosis and outcome in first-episode schizophrenia. American Journal of Psychiatry1992; 149: 1183–1188.