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Bulletin of Clinical Psychopharmacology, Vol: 21, Supplement: 2, 2011 - www.psikofarmakoloji.org<br />

Poster Presentations<br />

lithium treatment. His lithium treatment was stopped and glossodynia treatment begun. Shortly thereafter, his glossodynia symptoms<br />

disappeared. Psychotropic medications can cause mucosal ulcerations and it is important to consider these side effects in the differential<br />

diagnosis and and begin treatment as soon as possible.<br />

Key words: Lithium carbonate, glossodynia, side effects<br />

Bulletin of Clinical Psychopharmacology 2011;21(Suppl. 2):S160-1<br />

[PP-067] Ref. No: 300<br />

Two cases of affective disorder due to immunosuppresive treatment<br />

that followed renal transplantation<br />

Hüseyin Ünübol, Başak Ünübol, Jülide Güler, Alper Ünal<br />

Erenkoy Mental Health Education and Research Hospital, İstanbul, Turkey<br />

E-mail: hunubol@hotmail.com<br />

The advent of effective immunosuppressive medicines in the mid-1980s, most notably cyclosporine, revolutionized solid-organ transplant<br />

surgery. For the first time, survival rates reached acceptable levels and rendered organ transplantation a reasonable, non-experimental<br />

standard of medical practice. From the beginning, the immunosuppressive medications were noted to have significant neurological and<br />

psychiatric side effects. From that time to this, the neuropsychiatric side effects such as subjective anxiety or jitteriness, along with tremor,<br />

have served as endpoints in the clinical titration of the the most frequently used immunosuppressive medications, cyclosporine and<br />

tacrolimus. Experience over the past 15 years, however, has established the fact that there are other neuropsychiatric side effects, varying<br />

from seizures, stroke, and profound cognitive impairment to very subtle forms of neuropsychiatric difficulty. Here we present two cases<br />

that underwent uncomplicated renal transplantation and after the immunosuppressive therapy, developed psychiatric symptoms. The<br />

first case was a 29 year old woman with psychotic mania, and the second was a 25 year old male with severe depression that followed a<br />

hypomanic episode (1-3).<br />

Case No 1: A 29 year-old female patient, with a history of kidney transplantation 9 months ago, developed<br />

insomnia, nervousness, mobility, speaking too much, aggressive behavior towards her mother at home, destruction of items, thinking<br />

people were trying to poison her, self-talk in the office, increased skepticism, left her workplace without permission, angry and rowdy<br />

behavior.<br />

History: No previous psychiatric treatment. No family history of substance abuse and psychiatric illness. Surgery for kidney transplantation<br />

9 months ago. Twenty mg/day oral olanzapine treatment was started.<br />

Mycophenolate Mofetil 1000 mg tb 2*1 07:30 and 19:30, prednisolone 5 mg tb 1*2 07:30, cyclosporine 100 mg tb 1*1 19.30 cyclosporine<br />

100 mg tb 1*1 21:30 therapy was continued.<br />

Blood samples for monitoring of cyclosporine levels were sent outside the center. MPPI, Rorschach, and psychometric examinations were<br />

performed and she was evaluated in the direction of psychotic process. PMA is returning to normal; irritability and the patient’s insight<br />

improved on olanzapine 20 mg/day treatment and she was discharged.<br />

Case No 2: A 25 year-old, male patient, with a history of kidney transplantation 4 years ago. The symptoms included unhappiness,<br />

reluctance, discomfort, passive thoughts of death, and insomnia.<br />

Hisstory Kidney transplant in 2007. Approximately 1.5 years ago he had increased speech and movement and affective elation observed<br />

indicated a hypomanic episode in the hospital outpatient clinic as the patient was evaluated. Risperidone 2 mg/day treatment was<br />

started. Two months ago the patient presented with depressive symptoms and started sertraline 50 mg/day, quetiapine 25 mg/day, 500<br />

mg 2 * 2, Mycophenolate mofetil, prednisolone 5 mg, 1 * 1, tacrolimus 1 mg tb 2 * 2, a month after inpatient treatment, the patient became<br />

euthymic, anxiety resolved, and after the disappearance of suicidal ideation the patient was discharged.<br />

Key words: Renal transplantation, immunosuppresive treatment, depression, affective disorder<br />

References:<br />

1. Trzepacz PT, Brenner R, Van Thiel DH. A psychiatric study of 247 liver transplantation candidates. Psychosomatics 1989;30: 147-153.<br />

Bulletin of Clinical Psychopharmacology 2011;21(Suppl. 2):S161<br />

S161

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