Objective: Sensory gating deficits found in schizophrenia can be assessed by using a paired auditory stimulus paradigm to measure auditory evoked response. The ratio of the P50 response amplitude of the second or test stimulus to that of the first or conditioning stimulus is expressed as a percentage. Normal subjects generally suppress the second response and typically have ratios of less than 40%. Subjects with schizophrenia and half their first-degree relatives have deficits in sensory gating, with P50 ratios that are generally greater than 50%. Treatment with typical neuroleptics does not reverse this deficit. However, previous studies have shown that treatment with clozapine, an atypical neuroleptic, ameliorates this deficit in clinically responsive patients. This study sought to determine whether other atypical neuroleptics improve P50 ratios.
Method: P50 evoked potential recordings were obtained from 132 patients with schizophrenia and 177 healthy comparison subjects. Eighty-eight patients were being treated with atypical neuroleptics (clozapine [N=26], olanzapine [N=31], risperidone [N=22], and quetiapine [N=9]). Thirty-four patients were taking typical neuroleptics, and 10 were unmedicated.
Results: Healthy subjects exhibited P50 suppression that was significantly better than the schizophrenia patients receiving typical neuroleptics (mean=19.8% [SD=21.0%] versus 110.1% [SD=87.9%]). Patients receiving atypical neuroleptics had a mean P50 ratio that fell between these two means (mean=70.4%, SD=53.7%). When patients treated with different atypical neuroleptics were compared, only the clozapine group had mean P50 ratios that were in the normal range. All other groups exhibited auditory P50 response inhibition that was significantly poorer than that of the healthy subjects.
Conclusions: Improvement in P50 gating appears to be greatest in patients treated with clozapine.
Download full-text PDF |
Source |
---|---|
http://dx.doi.org/10.1176/ajp.161.10.1822 | DOI Listing |
Am J Case Rep
December 2024
Department of Surgery, Medical University of Sofia, University Hospital "Queen Giovanna - ISUL", Sofia, Bulgaria.
BACKGROUND Malignant hyperthermia (MH) and anesthesia-induced rhabdomyolysis (AIR) are rare, yet life-threatening complications that need prompt therapeutic actions and logistic preparedness for treatment success. Both conditions are triggered by general anesthetics, particularly volatiles and depolarizing muscle relaxants. In comparison with MH, which is an inherited pharmacogenomic disease of calcium channel receptor subpopulation and arises only after trigger exposure, AIR has been described mostly in patients with muscular dystrophies.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNaunyn Schmiedebergs Arch Pharmacol
December 2024
Institute for Pharmacology and Toxicology, Medical Faculty, Martin-Luther-University Halle-Wittenberg, Magdeburger Straße 4, Halle (Saale), D-06097, Germany.
Clozapine is an atypical antipsychotic (neuroleptic) drug. Clozapine binds to H-histamine receptors in vitro. We wanted to test the hypothesis that clozapine might be a functional antagonist at human cardiac H-histamine receptors.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFInt J Neuropsychopharmacol
December 2024
Department of Pharmacology & Toxicology, University of Toronto, Toronto, Ontario, Canada.
Background: Glutamatergic system dysfunction contributes to a full spectrum of schizophrenia-like symptoms, including the cognitive and negative symptoms that are resistant to treatment with antipsychotic drugs (APDs). Aripiprazole, an atypical APD, acts as a dopamine partial agonist, and its combination with haloperidol (a typical APD) has been suggested as a potential strategy to improve schizophrenia. Recently, an analog of aripiprazole, UNC9994, was developed.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Manag Care Spec Pharm
December 2024
University of Maryland School of Pharmacy, Baltimore.
Background: Individuals with depression who do not respond to initial antidepressant may switch to a different antidepressant, add a second antidepressant, or add an atypical antipsychotic. Previous studies comparing these strategies' efficacy and safety reported conflicting results, and the impact of these strategies on subsequent health care utilization is unknown.
Objective: To compare health care utilization between individuals with depression who switched antidepressants, added a second antidepressant (ie, combination), or added an atypical antipsychotic (ie, augmentation) following their initial antidepressant.
Eur J Neurol
January 2025
Department of Clinical Sciences, Clinical Memory Research Unit, Faculty of Medicine, Lund University, Lund, Sweden.
Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!