Background: Lithium augmentation is a first-line strategy for depressed patients resistant to antidepressive therapy, but little is known about patients' subsequent long-term course or outcome predictors. We investigated long-term outcomes of unipolar depressed patients who had participated in a study on the effects of lithium augmentation on the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenocortical system using the combined dexamethasone/corticotrophin-releasing hormone (DEX/CRH) test.
Methods: Twelve to 28 months (mean 18.
Amisulpride and risperidone are potent dopamine D2 receptor blocking atypical antipsychotics that can cause hyperprolactinemia. Preclinical evidence shows that chronic administration of antipsychotics can cause pituitary adenomas in female mice. To investigate the clinical relevance in this finding, reports of pituitary neoplasms in the WHO adverse drug reaction (ADR) database were reviewed.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFTherapy of the atypical antipsychotic drug clozapine is limited by a comparatively high incidence of agranulocytosis in 0.8% of patients. This severe side effect is possibly based on the clozapine-mediated stimulation of cytokines and soluble cytokine receptors release, followed by induction of granulocyte proliferation and induction of myeloperoxidase (MPO) and NADPH-oxidase.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF