| Literature DB >> 19366489 |
Romina Mizrahi1, David Mamo, Pablo Rusjan, Ariel Graff, Sylvain Houle, Shitij Kapur.
Abstract
Antipsychotic drugs produce unpleasant subjective experiences, which have been associated with high levels of dopamine D2 receptor occupancy. Aripiprazole is a partial agonist antipsychotic, which is hypothesized to produce a different subjective experience profile compared to standard D2 antagonist antipsychotics. The aim of this study was to compare the effect of D2 occupancy produced by a partial agonist antipsychotic (aripiprazole) to that of antagonist antipsychotics (risperidone or olanzapine) on the subjective well-being of patients. Subjective well-being was measured using the Subjective Well-being under Neuroleptics Scale (SWN) and was related to dopamine D2 receptor occupancy using [11C]raclopride PET. Patients that were switched to aripiprazole showed improvement in their subjective well-being from 79.80 (S.D.=16.08) to 89.90 (S.D.=15.33), an effect that was sustained for 6 months. This sustained improvement was observed despite very high levels of DA D2 occupancy (82-99%), in contrast to the effects of antagonist antipsychotics on subjective well-being.Entities:
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Year: 2009 PMID: 19366489 DOI: 10.1017/S1461145709000327
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Neuropsychopharmacol ISSN: 1461-1457 Impact factor: 5.176