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The Annals of Pharmacotherapy: Vol. 26, No. 2, pp. 193-195.
© 1992 Harvey Whitney Books Company.
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Research Articles

Psychiatric disturbances associated with ganciclovir therapy

JL Chen, JM Brocavich, and AY Lin

OBJECTIVE: To report a case of possible ganciclovir-induced psychiatric disturbances. CASE SUMMARY: A patient with AIDS who had no known psychiatric history and mild renal dysfunction experienced exacerbation of cytomegalovirus retinitis and was treated with ganciclovir 5 mg/kg iv q12h. The patient complained of nightmares and developed visual hallucinations and severe agitation on day 15 of ganciclovir therapy. The problems resolved after haloperidol administration and ganciclovir withdrawal and reappeared when the same regimen was reinstituted. However, the patient was able to tolerate the maintenance dose of ganciclovir at 5 mg/kg/d along with haloperidol later without further episodes of visual hallucinations. DISCUSSION: Case reports in the literature on ganciclovir-or its analog, acyclovir-, induced psychiatric disturbances were reviewed and compared. The potential relationship between ganciclovir accumulation in patients with renal insufficiency and the observed central nervous system problems in our patient was postulated. CONCLUSIONS: It is likely that ganciclovir accumulation contributed to the acute psychotic episodes observed in our patient. Adjusting ganciclovir dosage based on the patient's renal function is probably the only approach required to prevent or reduce the incidence of these episodes.


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B. A. Hansen, K. S. Greenberg, and J. A. Richter
Ganciclovir-Induced Psychosis
N. Engl. J. Med., October 31, 1996; 335(18): 1397 - 1397.
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Copyright © 1992 by Harvey Whitney Books Company.