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Long-term Antipsychotic Treatment and Brain Volumes: A Longitudinal Study of First-Episode Schizophrenia

TLDR
It is suggested that antipsychotics have a subtle but measurable influence on brain tissue loss over time, suggesting the importance of careful risk-benefit review of dosage and duration of treatment as well as their off-label use.
Abstract
Context Progressive brain volume changes in schizophrenia are thought to be due principally to the disease. However, recent animal studies indicate that antipsychotics, the mainstay of treatment for schizophrenia patients, may also contribute to brain tissue volume decrement. Because antipsychotics are prescribed for long periods for schizophrenia patients and have increasingly widespread use in other psychiatric disorders, it is imperative to determine their long-term effects on the human brain. Objective To evaluate relative contributions of 4 potential predictors (illness duration, antipsychotic treatment, illness severity, and substance abuse) of brain volume change. Design Predictors of brain volume changes were assessed prospectively based on multiple informants. Setting Data from the Iowa Longitudinal Study. Patients Two hundred eleven patients with schizophrenia who underwent repeated neuroimaging beginning soon after illness onset, yielding a total of 674 high-resolution magnetic resonance scans. On average, each patient had 3 scans (≥2 and as many as 5) over 7.2 years (up to 14 years). Main Outcome Measure Brain volumes. Results During longitudinal follow-up, antipsychotic treatment reflected national prescribing practices in 1991 through 2009. Longer follow-up correlated with smaller brain tissue volumes and larger cerebrospinal fluid volumes. Greater intensity of antipsychotic treatment was associated with indicators of generalized and specific brain tissue reduction after controlling for effects of the other 3 predictors. More antipsychotic treatment was associated with smaller gray matter volumes. Progressive decrement in white matter volume was most evident among patients who received more antipsychotic treatment. Illness severity had relatively modest correlations with tissue volume reduction, and alcohol/illicit drug misuse had no significant associations when effects of the other variables were adjusted. Conclusions Viewed together with data from animal studies, our study suggests that antipsychotics have a subtle but measurable influence on brain tissue loss over time, suggesting the importance of careful risk-benefit review of dosage and duration of treatment as well as their off-label use.

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Progressive trajectories of schizophrenia across symptoms, genes, and the brain

TL;DR: In this article , the authors explored the progressive trajectories of patterns of dysfunction after diagnosis and found that functional trajectories complemented previous findings of structural abnormalities and provides potential targets for drug and non-drug interventions in different stages of schizophrenia.
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California doctors under investigation for prescribing practices

Jeanne Lenzer
- 29 Jan 2015 - 
TL;DR: A local newspaper raised the alarm over doctors allegedly prescribing antipsychotic drugs for large numbers of foster children just to calm them down.
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Ricerca e impiego degli psicofarmaci

Antonio Maone
TL;DR: The quadro della ricerca sugli psicofarmaci appare oggi piuttosto controverso as mentioned in this paper, in which data from contraddittori da studi nel mondo reale e sulla reale entita della rilevanza clinica in confronto al placebo.
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Diagnosis of Schizophrenia Based on the Data of Various Modalities: Biomarkers and Machine Learning Techniques (Review)

TL;DR: In this paper , the authors present the analysis of the works which describe the correlates between the diagnosis of schizophrenia, established by health professionals, various manifestations of the psychiatric disorder (its subtype, variant of the course, severity degree, observed symptoms, etc.), and objectively measured characteristics/quantitative indicators (anatomical, functional, immunological, genetic, and others) obtained during instrumental and laboratory examinations of patients.
References
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