Journal of clinical psychopharmacology
-
J Clin Psychopharmacol · Feb 2000
Randomized Controlled Trial Clinical Trial Controlled Clinical TrialClonazepam and sertraline: absence of drug interaction in a multiple-dose study.
Thirteen subjects (seven men, six women) completed a placebo-controlled, randomized, double-blind, crossover study to determine whether an interaction occurs between clonazepam and sertraline. Ten days of once-daily doses of either clonazepam 1 mg and placebo (CZ + PL) or clonazepam 1 mg and sertraline 100 mg (CZ + SR) were administered; there was an 11-day washout period. Sertraline did not significantly affect the pharmacokinetics of clonazepam (p > 0.13). ⋯ Maximum impairment on all assessment days was low, with a less than 10% change from the drug-free values for CS and DSST. Despite higher clonazepam concentrations, predose (time 0) psychomotor and sedation scores did not differ among days -1, 1, 4, 7, and 10 or between treatments. These results in healthy volunteers indicate that sertraline does not affect the pharmacokinetics or pharmacodynamics of clonazepam.
-
J Clin Psychopharmacol · Dec 1999
Randomized Controlled Trial Clinical TrialAcute mania: haloperidol dose and augmentation with lithium or lorazepam.
Antipsychotic dosing for acute mania has not been well studied. Combined treatment with lithium and an antipsychotic is the most common treatment, but additional antimanic efficacy of a lithium-antipsychotic combination beyond that of an antipsychotic alone has not been well demonstrated. Furthermore, the possibility that lithium could affect antipsychotic dose requirement is believed to have never been studied. ⋯ All treatment effects emerged by the fourth day of treatment and persisted. Used alone, a haloperidol dose of 5 mg/day is too low for most manic patients, but concomitant lithium produces a dose-dependent enhancement of haloperidol response. Lorazepam 4 mg/day was insufficient to produce an advantage when added to low-dose haloperidol.
-
J Clin Psychopharmacol · Oct 1999
Randomized Controlled Trial Clinical TrialCardiac safety of citalopram: prospective trials and retrospective analyses.
The selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs) are believed to have a more benign cardiovascular safety profile than do the tricyclic antidepressants. The effects of the SSRI citalopram on cardiac conduction and repolarization have been extensively evaluated, both in prospective studies in volunteers and patients and in retrospective evaluations of all electrocardiographic (ECG) data from all clinical trials conducted from 1978 through 1996 (a total of 40 studies). A randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled study was conducted in healthy volunteers (N = 23) to assess intraindividual variability of the QTc interval, as well as possible changes during treatment with placebo or citalopram, and its correlation to plasma drug levels. ⋯ Finally, more than 6,000 ECGs (N = 1,789 citalopram-treated patients) collected from all clinical trials conducted from 1978 through 1996 were reassessed in a standardized manner to identify any effects of citalopram on ECG parameters. Results of both prospective and retrospective analyses showed that the only effect of citalopram on ECG findings is a small reduction in heart rate (< or = 8 beats per minute). There were no significant effects on PQ, QRS, or QTc intervals, indicating that citalopram has no effect on cardiac conduction and repolarization during short- or long-term treatment.
-
J Clin Psychopharmacol · Aug 1999
Randomized Controlled Trial Multicenter Study Clinical TrialTreatment of social phobia with gabapentin: a placebo-controlled study.
A randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled, parallel-group study was conducted to evaluate the efficacy and safety of gabapentin in relieving the symptoms of social phobia. Sixty-nine patients were randomly assigned to receive double-blind treatment with either gabapentin (dosed flexibly between 900 and 3,600 mg daily in three divided doses) or placebo for 14 weeks. A significant reduction (p < 0.05) in the symptoms of social phobia was observed among patients on gabapentin compared with those on placebo as evaluated by clinician- and patient-rated scales. ⋯ No serious adverse events or deaths were reported. On the basis of these limited data, it seems that gabapentin offers a favorable risk-benefit ratio for the treatment of patients with social phobia. Further studies are required to confirm this effect and to determine whether a dose-response relationship exists.
-
J Clin Psychopharmacol · Aug 1998
Randomized Controlled Trial Multicenter Study Comparative Study Clinical TrialAn exploratory haloperidol-controlled dose-finding study of ziprasidone in hospitalized patients with schizophrenia or schizoaffective disorder.
Ninety patients with schizophrenia or schizoaffective disorder according to DSM-III-R criteria participated in this double-blind, exploratory, dose-ranging trial. After a single-blind washout period of 4 to 7 days, patients were randomly assigned to receive one of four fixed doses of the new antipsychotic, ziprasidone 4 (N = 19), 10 (N = 17), 40 (N = 17), or 160 (N = 20) mg/day or haloperidol 15 mg/day (N = 17) for 4 weeks. A dose-response relationship among ziprasidone groups was established for improvements in Clinical Global Impression Severity (CGI-S) score (p = 0.002) but not in Brief Psychiatric Rating Scale (BPRS) total score (p = 0.08). ⋯ Haloperidol was associated with a sustained hyperprolactinemia, unlike ziprasidone, where only transient elevations in prolactin that returned to normal within the dosing interval were observed. Ziprasidone was well tolerated, and the incidence of adverse events was similar in all groups. The results of this study suggest that ziprasidone 160 mg/day is as effective as haloperidol 15 mg/day in reducing overall psychopathology and positive symptoms of an acute exacerbation of schizophrenia or schizoaffective disorder but has a lower potential to induce extrapyramidal symptoms.