Clozapine versus typical antipsychotics a retro- and prospective study of extrapyramidal side effects

1996 
Schizophrenic patients in long-term neuroleptic monotherapy with clozapine (n=100) and perphenazine, flupenthixol or zuclopentixol (controls,n=100) were evaluated for extrapyramidal side effects (EPS) (blind) as well as other side effects and mental condition (non-blind). In both groups the patients had received neuroleptic treatment for a total of 14 years (median) and the present antipsychotic (clozapine or control drug) for 5 years. Thus the clozapine-treated patients had previously received traditional neuroleptics for 9 years (median). The study was both retrospective (0.3–19 years for clozapine, 0.3–24 years for control drug, by means of chart information) and prospective (1 year, with video-controlled evaluation of EPS). There was a significantly lower prevalence of tardive dyskinesia (TD) in clozapine treated patients than control patients, although prior to this treatment there were more TD patients in the clozapine group (P<0.05). This lower level of TD in the clozapine group was related to a lower induction of new cases (P<0.001) and a tendency towards greater disappearance of TD in the clozapine than in the control group (P=0.07). Clozapine treated patients without TD had started clozapine and ceased traditional neuroleptics at an earlier age than those with TD. Parkinsonian signs were seen in 33% of the clozapine patients versus 61% of the control patients, mainly as hypokinesia; tremor in 3% versus 11% and rigidity in 0 versus 19%. Psychic akathisia was found in 14% versus 40% and motor akathisia in 7% versus 29% of the patients, all differences significantly in favor of clozapine. Clozapine treated patients also had less neuroleptic-induced emotional indifference and depression, but more autonomic side effects than controls.
    • Correction
    • Source
    • Cite
    • Save
    • Machine Reading By IdeaReader
    37
    References
    64
    Citations
    NaN
    KQI
    []