Publications by authors named "Staberock U"

Nonresponse to tricyclic antidepressant (TCA) treatment is observed in about one-third of depressed patients. The cause(s) for nonresponse - apart from disease-specific effects - might be the failure to build up sufficiently high serum TCA levels due to noncompliance, substance abuse, rapid metabolism, or low dose. We carried out a retrospective analysis relating antidepressant serum levels to patient data obtained in the naturalistic setting of the Psychiatric Hospital of the Bonn University during the introductory phase of drug-monitoring.

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The fluorescence polarization immunoassay (FPIA) developed by Abbott to diagnose intoxication with tricyclic antidepressants was adapted for therapeutic drug monitoring and validated with chromatograpic methods to investigate its potential for this use. We compared serum concentrations of tricyclic antidepressants in vivo and in vitro obtained by FPIA with those by gas chromatography and HPLC. For amitriptyline, imipramine, clomipramine, and doxepin, the detection limit of the FPIA was 72, 71, 64, and 72 nmol/L (approximately 20 micrograms/L), respectively; that by gas chromatography was 18, 18, and 16 nmol/L (approximately 5 micrograms/L) for amitriptyline, imipramine and clomipramine, respectively; with HPLC the lower limit of detection for doxepin was 36 nmol/L (10 micrograms/L).

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