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Bipolar Patients and Bullous Pemphigoid after Risperidone Long-Acting Injectable: A Case Report and a Review of the Literature

Journal

BRAIN SCIENCES
Volume 11, Issue 11, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/brainsci11111386

Keywords

bipolar disorder; risperidone LAI; antipsychotics; bullous pemphigoid; consultation-liaison psychiatry; neuroinflammation

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Neuropsychiatric disorders have been linked to bullous pemphigoid (BP), with antipsychotics identified as potential inducing factors. However, the exact biological mechanisms and timeline between neuropsychiatric disorders and BP remain undefined. Clinicians should consider BP as a possible adverse effect of psychotropic medications when treating psychiatric patients.
Neuropsychiatric disorders are found to be associated with bullous pemphigoid (BP), an autoimmune subepidermal blistering disease. Antipsychotics have emerged as possible inducing factors of BP. However, large sample studies concerning BP associated with antipsychotics, as well as with specific mental disorders, are still lacking. Our review retrieved a few clinical studies and case reports on the topic, producing controversial results. We report for the first time a bipolar patient case presenting BP following five-month therapy with risperidone long-acting injectable (LAI). We hypothesize that the dermatological event is associated with the medication administered. The issue emerged during psychiatric consultation and was confirmed by histological examination, direct and indirect immunofluorescence studies, plus positive plasma and cutaneous BP180 and BP230 IgG. Neurodegeneration or neuroinflammation might represent a primary process leading to a cross-reactive immune response between neural and cutaneous antigens and contributing to self-tolerance failure. Furthermore, the time sequence of the shared biological mechanisms leading to clinical manifestations of the neuropsychiatric disorder and BP remains undefined. BP comorbid with bipolar disorder might occasionally represent a serious health risk and affect patients' physical and psychosocial quality of life. Thus, clinicians treating psychiatric patients should consider BP as a possible adverse effect of psychotropic medications.

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