Scroll Up
Scroll Down
Play Play Play Play
Unregistered User
Click here if this is not your Personal Edition
 
Contact Us | Free E-Mail Updates | Journals | Register a colleague
 
 
Schizophrenia
 
   
 
SEARCH   
Doctor's Guide Free CME
Medline
Congress Resource Centre
 

 EXPLORE :
   Most Read News
 All News  All News
 All Webcasts / CME  All Webcasts / CME
 All Cases  All Cases
 Congress Resource Centre  Congress Resource Centre
 All Medical Resources  All Medical Resources
 Medical  My Personal Edition



Warning | Privacy

 

 
 Recent news - Schizophrenia
    Schizophrenia and Bipolar Disorder Share Genetic Roots, Researchers Find - (DGNews)
    Long-Acting Risperidone Shows Benefits in Recent-Onset Schizophrenia: Presented at WCBP - (DGDispatch)
    Injectable Risperidone Superior to Oral Quetiapine in Stable Patients With Schizophrenia Who Need Treatment Switch: Presented at WCBP - (DGDispatch)
    TopAbstracts in Schizophrenia 06/25/2009 - (DGNews)
    TopAbstracts in Schizophrenia 06/11/2009 - (DGNews)

    News archive

     Recent webcasts/CME - Schizophrenia
    • Major Depression and Psychoses: Screening, Accurately Diagnosing, and Properly Managing in Primary Care
    • Consistent Approach and Assessment Tools Aid Screening for Major Depressive Disorder and Psychosis in Primary Care
    • Navigating Differential Diagnosis in Major Depressive Disorder: The Role of the Primary Care Physician
    • Newer Classes Enhance Traditional Antidepressants and Are Preferred First-Line Therapies in Primary Care
    • Optimizing the Management of Schizophrenia: Evidence-Based Methods to Minimize the Burden of Disease in Managed Care

      Webcasts/CME archive

       Recent cases - Schizophrenia
        Localisation Using Mini C-Arm Fluoroscopy of Needles Ingested by a Woman with Schizophrenia: A Case Report
        Schizophrenia Spectrum Disorders in a Nigerian Family: 4 Case Reports
        Massive Pulmonary Emboli Associated with Olanzapine
        Presentation and Course of Brain Metastases from Breast Cancer in a Paranoid-Schizophrenic Patient: A Case Report
        Diabetic Control and Atypical Antipsychotics: A Case Report

        Cases archive
          




        my personal edition > schizophrenia > news
        divider

          E-Mail this DGNews to a colleague

        DGNews


        Different Antipsychotic Medications May Have Different Effects on Brain Volume in Patients with First Episode of Psychosis

        CHICAGO, IL -- April 7, 2005 -- After a first psychotic episode, patients who were treated with an atypical antipsychotic medication had less change in brain volume compared with patients treated with a conventional antipsychotic medication, according to an article in the April issue of Archives of General Psychiatry, one of the JAMA/Archives journals.

        Structural brain abnormalities, such as reductions in gray matter volume, have been consistently described in patients with schizophrenia, according to background information in the article.

        The current study was designed to test whether patients treated with an atypical antipsychotic medication (olanzapine) would have less reduction in gray matter volume than patients treated with a conventional antipsychotic medication (haloperidol), and whether these changes are associated with changes in disturbed thinking and general mental functioning.

        Jeffrey A. Lieberman, MD, of the University of North Carolina Medical School, Chapel Hill, at the time of the study, and colleagues studied 161 patients who were randomly assigned treatment with either haloperidol or olanzapine at the time of a first psychotic episode (baseline).

        Patients underwent neurocognitive testing and magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) assessments at baseline, and then at 12, 24, 52 and 104 weeks of treatment in a five-year longitudinal study conducted at 14 academic medical centers. A matched sample of 58 healthy volunteers underwent MRI and were compared on brain volume measures.

        "The principle new finding of this study is the significant difference in the course and magnitude of these changes between patients treated with haloperidol, a conventional antipsychotic, and olanzapine, an atypical antipsychotic," the authors report. "Specifically, olanzapine was associated with less such change in brain volume during and in the aftermath of the first psychotic episode. These differences in volume change were highlighted by the comparison with healthy volunteers, which showed no significant reductions in gray matter volume and a trajectory similar to that of the olanzapine group."

        "The associations between greater decrease in WBGM [whole brain gray matter] and less improvement in neurocognitve functioning [general mental functioning], and greater improvements on PANSS total and negative subscales [a measure of disturbed thinking] with less increase in lateral ventricular volume indicate that treatment effects on brain volume and the behavioral pathology of the illness may be associated," the authors write.

        "Although these results must be confirmed, they suggest that a significant difference exists between a typical antipsychotic (haloperidol) and an atypical agent (olanzapine) that is due to either a safety or efficacy advantage and reflected by a differential pattern of brain volume change and clinical response," the authors conclude. "Future clinical studies should attempt to verify whether the early stage of psychosis is associated with brain volume changes and whether antipsychotics can neurobiologically alter the course of the disease."

        This study was supported by Lilly Research Laboratories, Indianapolis, Ind.; Public Health Service and other grants from the National Institute of Mental Health, National Institute of Health, Bethesda, Maryland; the University of North Carolina Mental Health and Neuroscience Clinical Research Center, Chapel Hill; the North Carolina Foundation of Hope, Raleigh; and the National Alliance for Research on Schizophrenia and Depression (NARSAD) Foundation, Great Neck, New York.


        Arch Gen Psychiatry. 2005; 62:361-370.


        SOURCE: American Medical Association



        E-Mail this DGNews to a colleague   To print, use this version






        All contents Copyright (c) 1995-2009 Doctor's Guide Publishing Limited. All rights reserved.



        The NTK initiative. Physicians helping physicians identify Need-To-Know science
           Feedback
        Please rate this article: Strongly DISAGREE...Strongly AGREE NTK logo
        Question 1 - Physicians need to become aware of this information as soon as possible. Question 2 - This information is likely to have an impact on the way physicians practice medicine.
        1
        2
        3
        4
        5
        6
        7
        Send