As part of a prospective clinical study investigating the effects of atypical neuroleptics on autonomic neurocardiac function (ANF), serial standardized recordings of conventional electrocardiograms and computer-calculated measurements of 5-minute resting heart rate variability (HRV) were obtained from 51 medication-free inpatients with schizophrenia (DSM-III-R-diagnosed) before and after an average of 14.1 days of treatment with amisulpride 400 mg/day (N = 12), olanzapine 20 mg/day (N = 13), sertindole 12 mg/day (N = 13), or clozapine 100 mg/day (N = 13). Reference values for the HRV data were obtained from a large group of well-matched healthy controls (N = 70). The most important findings were the following: (1) clozapine, olanzapine, and sertindole all prolonged mean frequency-corrected QTc times, which, in the case of sertindole, proved to be significant (Wilcoxon test p <0.05); (2) sertindole and clozapine significantly increased the mean resting heart rate; and (3) only clozapine significantly reduced the parasympathetic resting tone. The results of the HRV studies are discussed considering the in vitro receptor profiles of the atypical neuroleptics under study. Potential implications for the cardiac safety and tolerance of these drugs are also discussed.
This result corroborates the hypothesis of the IDAP as a differential indicator of serotonergic versus noradrenergic antidepressant psychopharmacotherapy.
Several case reports described neurotoxic side-effects in the course of a combined clozapine-lithium treatment. Here we report on the safety and efficacy of this combination in a sample of 44 hospital patients. Medical records were retrospectively audited and a subsample of 23 patients was re-assessed. Mean total duration of combined treatment was 23.5 months. The combination (indications: prophylaxis; treatment of affective symptoms or aggression/excitement; augmentation of neuroleptic efficacy) was rated effective in 84% and adverse events were reported in 64% of the patients. Notably, most of the adverse events were benign and transient. However, 8 patients (18%) developed transient neurological adverse events that were genuinely novel in only 3 patients (7%) and coincided with high dosage of medication or high plasma levels or serotonergic (antidepressant) co-medication. Our data suggest that combined clozapine-lithium treatment may appear to be safe and effective when administered within a moderate therapeutic dose range and without serotonergic co-medication or other substances interfering with clozapine metabolism.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.