Vitamin E, recommended variously for preventing cardiovascular disease, Alzheimer’s disease, and tardive dyskinesia, has taken quite a drubbing in recent years. Recent results from Harvard’s Women's Health Study have put another nail in its coffin.
Guanfacine is an alpha-2 agonists approved for the treatment of hypertension, but commonly prescribed for posttraumatic stress disorder. Like clonidine, another alpha-2 agonist, guanfacine is believed to decrease norepinephrine release from noradrenergic neurons during states of heightened arousal.
We have no effective treatment for severe amphetamine dependence. Now, a study from Finland points to an obvious candidate treatment for those meeting DSMIV criteria for intravenous amphetamine dependence. Patients were randomly assigned to Abilify (aripiprazole--15 mg/day), Concerta (methylphenidate controlled release--54 mg/day) or placebo for 20 weeks.
Recently, the FDA approved the Amplichip CYP450 Test (from Roche Diagnostics), which is a device allowing laboratories to quickly find out whether your patient metabolizes drugs too slowly or too quickly.
The latest results from the CATIE trial indicate that treatment with Trilafon (perphenazine) is not only much cheaper than treatment with SGAs (second generation antipsychotics), but leads to superior overall quality of life for patients.
Only after thinking long and hard about it, according to the long anticipated results from the CATIE-AD trial. In this study, 421 patients with Alzheimer’s Disease were randomized to double-blind treatment with Zyprexa (mean dose, 3.2 mg/day), Seroquel (34.1 mg/day), Risperdal (0.7 mg/day), or placebo.