Journal of Personalized Medicine (Mar 2022)

Clinical Approaches to Late-Onset Psychosis

  • Kiwon Kim,
  • Hong Jin Jeon,
  • Woojae Myung,
  • Seung Wan Suh,
  • Su Jeong Seong,
  • Jae Yeon Hwang,
  • Je il Ryu,
  • Seon-Cheol Park

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/jpm12030381
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 3
p. 381

Abstract

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Psychosis can include schizophrenia, mood disorders with psychotic features, delusional disorder, active delirium, and neurodegenerative disorders accompanied by various psychotic symptoms. Late-onset psychosis requires careful intervention due to the greater associated risks of secondary psychosis; higher morbidity and mortality rates than early-onset psychosis; and complicated treatment considerations due to the higher incidence of adverse effects, even with the black box warning against antipsychotics. Pharmacological treatment, including antipsychotics, should be carefully initiated with the lowest dosage for short-term efficacy and monitoring of adverse side effects. Further research involving larger samples, more trials with different countries working in consortia, and unified operational definitions for diagnosis will help elaborate the clinical characteristics of late-onset psychosis and lead to the development of treatment approaches.

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