Acta Psychiatr Belg
February 1989
Ten psychiatrists have independently rated the clinical profile of fluoxetin (Prozac) at the daily dose of 20 mg according to a "Stars of Liège" model comprising three parameters of therapeutic activity (antidepressant, psychostimulant and anxiolytic) and three parameters of side-effects (anticholinergic, sedative and hypotensive). Each parameter, graduated from 0 to 5 (no, very weak, weak, moderate, potent, very potent effect) was rated by each investigator according to his personal experience with at least 10 patients. Mean ratings given to fluoxetine show a moderate antidepressant effect, equal to amitriptyline (Rédomex, Tryptizol 75 mg/d, clomipramine (Anafranil 75 mg/d and nialamide (Niamide 100 mg/d, weak psychostimulating and anxiolytic effects, a very weak sedative effect and a lack of anticholinergic and hypotensive effects.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFActa Psychiatr Belg
February 1986
In order to develop practical criteria to guide in the selection of antidepressant medication according to depressive symptomatology, we propose a graphical representation of the clinical activity of 24 antidepressants according to a "star" model. Six parameters have been evaluated from 0 to 5 in comparison to reference drugs (rated 5) by 11 independent "blind" psychiatrists expert in pharmacotherapy. Three parameters were used as measures of therapeutic activity: antidepressant, psychostimulant, and anxiolytic, with iproniazide 75 mg/d, metamphetamine 15 mg/d, and diazepam 20 mg/d as reference drugs respectively.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Affect Disord
December 1984
The therapeutic effect and safety of alprazolam and doxepin were studied in 126 outpatients suffering from primary unipolar depression. The 6-week study was double-blind with a random allocation of treatment. Patients were treated with a flexible dose of 1.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCurr Med Res Opin
June 1984
Clinical differences exist between the benzodiazepines but demonstration of such differences requires a more specialized methodology than that normally used in comparative trials. It is recommended that double-blind studies should be carried out in hospitalized patients with severe and chronic anxiety, selected according to precise criteria, and that the trials should be designed as crossover rather than as parallel group studies, with randomization of the stages and flexible dosage. A simple graphic method of representing the clinical profile of individual benzodiazepines is described and it is suggested that this could help clinicians adapt their prescribing to each patient's symptoms.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIn a double-blind clinical trial, 50 psychiatric outpatients with moderate insomnia (requiring daily treatment with a hypnotic drug) were treated for two weeks with lormetazepam (1 mg) or amobarbital sodium (100 mg). In interviews before and after treatment, data were collected on the patients' demographic characteristics, sleep disturbances, concomitant organic or psychiatric disorders, and opinions of the drug taken during the two-week period. During the trial the patients took notes on their use of the drug, the quality and duration of their sleep, and any adverse effects of the drug they were using.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFActa Psychiatr Belg
September 1982
During a double-blind clinical study, a new hypnotic benzodiazepine, lormetazepam (Wy 4082), was compared at a fixed dose of 1 mg to sodium amobarbital at a fixed dose of 100 mg for the treatment of moderate insomnia in 2 groups of 25 psychiatric outpatients. The medication was given at bedtime and the duration of the study was limited to 2 weeks. The quality of sleep was evaluated by the patient after the first night and at the end of the first and second week and by investigator at the end of the 2 weeks trial.
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July 1981
A 20 year old patient who has been hospitalized for depressive schizoidia is treated by nomifensine (75 mg/d) plus pimozide (4 mg/d). Four days later, he shows a typical neuroleptic malignant syndrome (Syndrome malin de Delay et Deniker). The biological explorations show that inflammatory blood tests are increased, hepatic tests are disturbed and the pituitary tests suggest a hypothalamic disturbance of the balance between NE and DA (reduced STH, FHS and LH) with a relative NE predominance, but also an increase of DA (increased HVA in CSF.
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