Nineteen major depressed inpatients were treated over three weeks with desipramine. Cardiac beta-adrenergic receptor sensitivity was evaluated by an isoproterenol test before and after the three-week treatment. Desipramine induced a beta-adrenergic sensitivity decrease in most of the patients: I 20 (isoproterenol dose necessary to increase by 20 beats/min. the basal heart rate) before treatment: 89 +/- 37 ng/kg (mean +/- SD); after treatment: 170 +/- 135 ng/kg; p(t) less than 0.03. Despite a linear relationship between pretreatment beta-adrenergic sensitivity and post-treatment clinical state, there was no relation between post-treatment cardiac beta-adrenergic sensitivity and therapeutic response or even desipramine plasma levels.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1055/s-2007-1014520 | DOI Listing |
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