Dopamine Pathways
Risk Factors & Rule-Outs
DSM-5 Criteria
Antipsychotic Drugs & Doses
Pearls & CATIE
Special Populations & Side Effects
100

Which pathway’s dopamine excess causes positive symptoms?  

What is Mesolimbic (↑ DA)

100

Name one perinatal or birth-related risk factor for schizophrenia.

What is hypoxia, perinatal adversity, birth complications. 

100

How many symptoms are required in the 1-month active phase?

What are at least 2; one must be delusions, hallucinations, or disorganized speech. 

100

Name two first-generation antipsychotics ( brand and generic).

What is Haloperidol (Haldol®),Chlorpromazine (Thorazine®),Fluphenazine (Prolixin®),  Trifluoperazine (Stelazine®), Thiothixene (Navane®)


100

Which SGA carries the highest metabolic risk?

What is Olanzapine (Zyprexa®) 

100

Which population carries a class-wide BBW for ↑ mortality when using antipsychotics?

What is Elderly with dementia-related psychosis

200

Which pathway’s dopamine deficiency causes negative & cognitive symptoms?

What is Mesocortical (↓ DA) 

200

What season of birth is linked to higher schizophrenia risk?

What is late winter/early spring. 

200

What is the minimum total duration for a schizophrenia diagnosis?

What is ≥ 6 months (includes prodrome/residual). 

200

Name two second-generation antipsychotics.

What is Risperidone — Risperdal®,Olanzapine — Zyprexa®,Quetiapine — Seroquel® / Seroquel XR®,Ziprasidone — Geodon®,Aripiprazole — Abilify®,Paliperidone — Invega®,Asenapine — Saphris®, Iloperidone — Fanapt®,Lurasidone — Latuda®,Cariprazine — Vraylar®,Brexpiprazole — Rexulti®,Lumateperone — Caplyta®,Xanomeline/trospium — Cobenfy®,Clozapine — Clozaril®

200

Which drug requires REMS due to agranulocytosis?

What is Clozapine (Clozaril®) 

200

Which antipsychotic is Pregnancy Category B?

What is Lurasidone (Latuda®)

300

Which pathway blockade causes EPS?

Nigrostriatal

300

Name two substances that can mimic psychosis and must be ruled out.

What is PCP, LSD, methamphetamine, synthetic cannabinoids. 

300

Which criteria specifies social/occupational dysfunction?

What is criterion B 

300

Starting dose for risperidone in acute psychosis?

What is 1–2 mg/day; usual 1–6 mg/day

300

What did the CATIE trial conclude about olanzapine vs other SGAs?

What is Olanzapine had longer time to discontinuation; clozapine best for TRS. 

300

Which antipsychotics have highest EPS risk?

What is Paliperidone (Invega®) and Risperidone (Risperdal®)

400

Which pathway blockade causes ↑ prolactin?

What is Tuberoinfundibular. 

400

Which medical conditions should be ruled out before diagnosing schizophrenia?

What is thyroid disease, CNS tumor/stroke, B12 deficiency, HIV, syphilis, delirium/dementia. 

400

Which disorders must be ruled out under DSM-5 Criterion D?

What are schizoaffective and mood disorders.

400

What’s the dose of olanzapine?

 What is 2–5 mg QHS; target 10–20 mg/day (max 20). Acute IM Q2–4h available

400

Which SGAs are weight-neutral options?

What are Aripiprazole(Abilify®), ziprasidone(Geodon®), lurasidone(Latuda®), lumateperone(Caplyta®),Asenapine (Saphris®) . 

400

Which antipsychotic is most effective for treatment-resistant schizophrenia and suicidality?

What is Clozapine (Clozaril)

500

How do FGAs vs SGAs differ in their effects on dopamine pathways?

What is FGAs: strong D₂ block → treat positive but ↑ EPS/prolactin, may worsen negative/cognitive; SGAs: D₂ + 5-HT₂A antagonism → less EPS, may help negative symptoms, but more metabolic AEs. 

500

Name 3 non-genetic risk factors for schizophrenia

What are urban upbringing, paternal age, perinatal complications, seasonal birth. 

500

What special rule applies if pervasive developmental disorder is present? 

What is schizophrenia can only be diagnosed if prominent delusions/hallucinations are present ≥1 month.

500

Which SGA has multiple LAI formulations (monthly to every 6 months)?

What is Paliperidone (Invega® Sustenna®, Trinza®, Hafyera®).

500

Which SGA must be taken with food, and which one with a fatty meal specifically?

What is Lurasidone (Latuda®) with food and Ziprasidone (Geodon®) with fatty meal

500

Which options are best for children/adolescents to minimize metabolic/EPS risk?

What are Weight-neutral choices like Aripiprazole (Abilify®), Ziprasidone (Geodon®), Lurasidone (Latuda®), and Asenapine (Saphris®)?