Several review articles suggest that the risk of recurrent acute dystonia is higher in patients with a prior dystonic reaction; however, evidence specifically evaluating recurrence after haloperidol rechallenge is limited. Acute dystonia is a dopamine D2 receptor-blocking agent-induced movement disorder characterized by involuntary muscle contractions that may involve the neck, jaw, eyes (oculogyric crisis), facial muscles, extremities, or other muscle groups. Symptoms typically occur shortly after exposure, with approximately 50% of reactions occurring within 48 hours and 90% within 5 days of initiating therapy or increasing the dose. High-potency antipsychotics, including haloperidol, have a greater risk of causing acute dystonia due to stronger dopamine receptor blockade. Notably, one dated review article notes that a prior acute dystonic reaction is the strongest risk factor for developing another dystonic reaction, with a reported up to six-fold increased relative risk. Additionally, the review cites a prior study in which 30 of 34 patients (88.2%) who developed extrapyramidal symptoms during a second antipsychotic treatment had also experienced extrapyramidal symptoms during their first treatment; when dystonia was evaluated specifically, 8 of 11 patients (72.7%) who developed dystonia during the second treatment had also experienced dystonia during the first treatment (see Table 1). However, this study evaluated antipsychotic-induced extrapyramidal symptoms broadly and was not specific to haloperidol rechallenge. Management recommendations emphasize avoiding the offending medication after an acute dystonic reaction when possible and switching to an alternative agent with lower extrapyramidal symptom risk. If dopamine-blocking therapy is required, anticholinergic therapy (e.g., benztropine) may be considered in high-risk situations; however, long-term prophylactic anticholinergic use is generally not recommended and should be individualized due to potential adverse effects. Overall, the literature supports that a patient with a prior medication-induced dystonic reaction has an increased susceptibility to future dystonic reactions with dopamine receptor-blocking agents, but the exact recurrence risk after re-administration of haloperidol specifically is not established. [1], [2], [3], [4], [5], [6]