If so, you may be entitled to compensation for your injuries. Get a free lawsuit case review today with a qualified Zyprexa lawyer.
Zyprexa (generic: olanzapine) has been linked to diabetes, hyperglycemia, pancreatitis and diabetic ketoacidosis. Zyprexa is manufactured by Eli Lilly & Co. and was approved in 1996 as a schizophrenia medication. In 2000, it was approved for the treatment of bipolar mania. Zyprexa is an atypical antipsychotic medication, a newer class of drugs touted as effectively treating schizophrenia but without the motor side effects of the older antipsychotic medications including Thorazine and Haldol. These older drugs treated the positive (delusions, thought disorder, and hallucinations) and negative (social withdrawal, lack of energy, apathy, and reduced ability to express emotion) symptoms of schizophrenia, but they also had unwanted motor side effects such as akathisia (restlessness and fidgeting), tardive dyskinesia (involuntary, uncontrollable movements), and akinesia (drug-induced Parkinsonism, including tremors). Zyprexa and the other atypical antipsychotics were marketed as being just as effective but as having fewer unwanted side effects. It is now clear that the Zyprexa-diabetes link has injured thousands of people who believed they were taking a safe medication.