“…These studies indicate conclusively that, when matched appropriately with nonpsychiatric subjects, patients with schizophrenia do not exhibit greater than expected serum leptin levels regardless of antipsychotic drug exposure (Baptista et al, 2001;Eder et al, 2001;Herran et al, 2001;Hagg et al, 2001;Zhang et al, 2003;Arranz et al, 2004;Sporn et al, 2005;Haupt et al, 2005;Gergerlioglu et al, 2006;Atmaca et al, 2007). The one controlled comparative study of medication-treated bipolar patients vs. matched controls also reported no significant difference in leptin levels between the psychiatric patients and their peers (Gergerlioglu et al, 2006). Interestingly, a 6-month prospective risperidone study in autistic children noted no increase in serum leptin levels despite a mean weight gain of 5.6 kg (Martin et al, 2004), Lastly, a single 12-week prospective trial compared the effects of olanzapine, risperidone and quetiapine for levodopa psychosis in 30 Parkinson's Disease (PD) patients, using one group of PD subjects (n=10) treated solely with antiparkinsonian medications and another unmedicated cohort (n=10) as controls (Rustembegovic et al, 2006).…”