This study is a comparison across treatment settings of two previously published trials, namely the Danish University Antidepressant Group (DUAG) study on citalopram vs. clomipramine in hospitalized patients with major depression, and the Nordic citalopram vs. imipramine study of depressed patients treated by their family doctors.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFTwo dose levels of citalopram, 10-30 mg and 20-60 mg, were compared with imipramine, 50-150 mg, in depressed patients treated in general practice. This was a multicentre study carried out in Denmark, Sweden, Norway, and Finland. The duration of treatment was 6 weeks with an optional continuation phase of a further 16 weeks.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA meta-analysis was carried out of the data from two double-blind, multi-centre studies with identical methodology which compared the effectiveness of treatment of elderly patients with zuclopenthixol and with other antipsychotic drugs. In one study, patients were treated for 4 weeks with either zuclopenthixol or melperone; in the other, with either zuclopenthixol or a combination of haloperidol and levomepromazine. The meta-analysis evaluated the results of 96 patients, 49 in the zuclopenthixol group and 47 in the comparison group.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA double-blind study was carried out in 48 hospitalized, elderly demented patients with key symptoms of aggressiveness and agitation to evaluate the efficacy and tolerability of zuclopenthixol compared with that of haloperidol/levomepromazine. Patients were allocated at random to receive initial doses of either 4 mg zuclopenthixol daily or 1 mg haloperidol in the morning and 5 mg levomepromazine in the evening over a period of 4 weeks. In Week 4, the mean daily dose was 4.
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