What Do Antipsychotics Treat?
How Antipsychotics Work in the Brain
Types of Antipsychotics
Side Effects & Safety
Taking Antipsychotics Correctly
100

This symptom involves seeing or hearing things that are not actually there.

What are hallucinations?

100

Brain cells communicate using these chemical messengers

What are neurotransmitters?

100

Antipsychotics are divided into these two main groups.

What are first-generation and second-generation antipsychotics?

100

Movement-related side effects caused by some antipsychotics.

What are extrapyramidal symptoms (EPS)?

100

The amount of time antipsychotics may take to fully work.

What is 2 to 6 weeks or longer?

200

Strong beliefs that do not match reality are known as this.

What are delusions?

200

This neurotransmitter is closely linked to hallucinations and paranoia.

What is dopamine?

200

Another name for first-generation antipsychotics is this.

What are typical or conventional antipsychotics?

200

The antipsychotic group most associated with EPS.

What are first-generation antipsychotics?

200

What may happen when doses are missed.

What is return or worsening of symptoms?

300

Seeing or hearing things that are not actually present

What are hallucinations?

300

Too much dopamine activity can lead to this type of symptom.

What is psychosis?

300

Another name for second-generation antipsychotics is this.

What are atypical antipsychotics?

300

Side effects that include weight gain, high blood sugar, and high cholesterol.

What are metabolic side effects?

300

The safest step before stopping or changing antipsychotic medication.

What is talking to your provider?

400

True or False: Antipsychotics are only used for schizophrenia.

What is false?

400

Antipsychotics help by blocking or balancing this brain chemical.

What is dopamine?

400

The antipsychotic group more likely to cause movement-related side effects.

What are first-generation antipsychotics?

400

The most appropriate action if side effects occur.

What is telling your doctor or provider?

400

A form of antipsychotic medication given every few weeks or months

What are long-acting injectables?

500

Name one condition other than schizophrenia where antipsychotics may be used.

What is bipolar disorder / depression / OCD / PTSD / Tourette’s / drug-induced psychosis?

500

Second-generation antipsychotics affect dopamine and this other neurotransmitter.

What is serotonin?

500

The antipsychotic group more likely to cause weight gain and blood sugar changes.

What are second-generation antipsychotics?

500

One strategy providers use to manage EPS.

What is lowering the dose?

500

A benefit of long-acting injectable antipsychotics.

What is improved medication consistency?

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