Psychosis is a generic term covering (for the purposes of the present article)) schizophrenia, brief reactive psychoses and manic episodes. Traditionally, research has focused on the effect of antipsychotic agents on positive or productive symptoms such as hallucinations or delusions. More recently, attention has been focused on negative symptoms such as emotional withdrawal or impairment of social participation. Typical antipsychotic medications such as phenothiazines have little effect on these clinical manifestations. This has raised interest in atypical antipsychotics such as clozapine. Acute psychotic episodes are less difficult to treat than long term schizophrenic manifestations. Current research indicates that antipsychotics are effective only if a threshold concentration is reached, but that above a certain level, dose escalation is of no benefit to the patient. This implies the existence of an optimal therapeutic concentration range. Due to interindividual variability caused by age, genetic and interethnic factors or drug-drug interactions, antipsychotic plasma concentrations show a wide range of values for the same dosage regimen. This is why clinical pharmacokinetic principles and therapeutic drug monitoring are essential tools for dosage individualization. Clinical pharmacokinetics in therapeutics implies that the pharmacokinetic parameters of the medication under scrutiny are known. This is, however, not always the case with antipsychotics since, due to the difficulties encountered in conducting phase I studies in healthy volunteers with these substances, published data are not always complete.