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Q. My 19 yr. old daughter was "diagnosed" with BPD a year ago, though her journey
has been going on for three years now. She is currently on Clozaril 400mg (down from
600mg). She complains of "crawling skin" and has been told that this is
tactile
hallucination. She has been on Clozaril for about six months. Now she will
try
Thorazine. What are tactile hallucinations? Are they drug induced? Will
Clozaril or
Thorazine help? If not, what?
A. I am not sure if it will help to be on Clozaril or not. There are two
literature reports that it helps some people a good deal, but it has side
effects of weight gain and mental slowing. Tactile "hallucinations" would not
be a normal finding in BPD. People feel things if they are anxious, but it is
not delusional/hallucinatory that I have ever seen.
Thorazine in borderlines will not work. There is not any data to show that
typical neuroleptics (Thorazine, Haldol, Navane, Stelazine, Trilafon, etc.)
do anything in borderlines other than tranquilize them for the first few
weeks they are on it. The chances of tardive dyskinesia are high. In fact,
any side effect is intolerable for a medication that does not work.
Controlled trials show it to be ineffective. Better to use an antidepressant
as we have documented in our studies. Anticonvulsants (Tegretol, Depakote,
Lamictal, etc.) would be a better choice, too. Heck, Cowdry and Gardner
showed neuroleptics were ineffective 15 years ago.

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