| Literature DB >> 21318056 |
Nikhil Nihalani1, Thomas L Schwartz, Umar A Siddiqui, James L Megna.
Abstract
A majority of psychiatric medications are known to generate weight gain and ultimately obesity in some patients. There is much speculation about the prevalence of weight gain and the degree of weight gain during acute and longitudinal treatment with these agents. There is newer literature looking at the etiology of this weight gain and the potential treatments being used to alleviate this side effect. The authors undertook a comprehensive literature review in order to present epidemiology, etiology, and treatment options of weight gain associated with antipsychotics, mood stabilizers, and antidepressants.Entities:
Year: 2011 PMID: 21318056 PMCID: PMC3034985 DOI: 10.1155/2011/893629
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Obes ISSN: 2090-0708
Weight gain treatment options.
| Mode or medication | Weight loss produced | Duration of treatment |
|---|---|---|
| Behaviour modification | 0.5–0.7 kg per week | — |
| Cognitive-behavioral therapy | 4.5 drop in BMI | — |
| Naltreoxone and buropion | 4% | — |
| Phentermine and topiramate | 9% | 1 year |
| Sibutramine | 10–15% | <1 year |
| Orlistat | 10.2%, 8.8% | 1 year |
| Orlistat | >10% | 2 years |
| Orlistat | 34.6% | ? |
| Amantadine | 3.5 kg | 3–6 months |
| Nizatidine | Gained 3 kg less than patients who did not take Nizatidine | 16 weeks |
| Naltexone | 5 kg | 8 weeks |
| Topiramate augmentation | 10–15 lbs | — |
| Metformin | 15/19 patients lost weight | 12 weeks |