ResultsThis study selected 31 patients with mean age of 33,61 ± 1,90 years old enrolled in a public mental health service with psychotic disorder related to the use of cocaine, crack an alcohol.
Patients under this study were addicted to alcohol (61,29%), cocaine, crack or the association of both (38,71%).
Effects related to the use of cocaine were delirium/hallucination (50%), cardiovascular effects (27,76%), psychomotor agitation (11,12%). (No effects reported 11,10%).
Patient-reported, crack-related effects were delirium and hallucination (50%), cardiovascular effects (37,50%). (No effects reported 12,50%).
Psychosis (73,08%), aggressive behavior (7,69%), abstinence syndrome (11,54%), were associated to the use of alcohol. (No side effects reported 7,69%)
The pharmacological treatment to these patients were typical neuroleptics (41,94%), atypical neuroleptics (22,58%), typical and atypical neuroleptics associated (29,03%), (No treatment 6,45%).
Side effects related to pharmacological treatment were extrapyramidal effects (56,24%), delirium/hallucination (43,74%), memory impairment (34,37%), anxiety(31,25%),attention deficit (21,87%), psychotic depression (12,50%), verbal communication deficit (3,12%).
These effects were treated with biperiden (58,34%), promethazine or benzodiazepines (25,00%). (No treatment was done in16,67%).