Neuroleptics in the treatment of dementia
โ Scribed by Dr. Trey Sunderland; Michael A. Silver
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 1988
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 659 KB
- Volume
- 3
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0885-6230
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
โฆ Synopsis
The authors review the history of neuroleptic treatment in dementia. The initial review of 34 studies published since 1954 was limited to the 20 double-blind and/or placebo-controlled studies. Sixty per cent of the studies revealed generally positive clinical results in demented patients following neuroleptic treatment. Acute side-effects were not reported to be more prevalent or severe than in other psychiatric populations and included sedation, orthostatic hypotension, extrapyramidal reactions, and various anticholinergic symptoms. Careful assessment of the cognitive effects following neuroleptics, particularly those with known anticholinergic properties, was not performed in most of these studies and should be a focus of future prospective studies in this population. Nonetheless, it does appear that neuroleptics have a role in the treatment of patients with dementia. When used at low doses for specific purposes (i.e. treatment of agitation, hyperactivity, hallucinations, or hostility), they can both safe and effective in this population.
๐ SIMILAR VOLUMES
fact may be ascribed to a primarily biological origin of the disease, not correlated with other possible causative events (e.g. chronic somatic diseases). On the other hand, in patients with reactive depressive symptoms a higher prevalence of somatic dysfunction (e.g. number of diseases, Charlson In
Neuroleptics have a deยฎnite role in dementia but the treatment targets need to be more narrowly deยฎned. Symptom clusters that are neuroleptic-responsive (e.g., aggression, psychomotor agitation and psychosis) appear to be emerging but need clearer deยฎnition and measurement. A number of these symptom