"As a practicing child and adolescent psychiatrist, I have been following with great interest the recent media attention being paid to young people, mental illness and the pharmaceutical industry."
"This is a topic that has been of continuing concern to the medical and non-medical communities. It raises a variety of important questions regarding the relationships between patients, physicians and drug companies; there are a variety of factors that have yet to be addressed."
READ MORE @ HUFFINGTON POST
Wednesday, June 13, 2007
Tuesday, June 12, 2007
Depression + osteoporosis link still unclear
Older women who take certain antidepressants are at increased risk of fracturing a bone, but it's not clear whether the association is due to the drugs, depression itself, or some other factor, according to a new report in the Harvard Women's Health Watch.
Nevertheless, while women shouldn't stop taking antidepressant drugs for the sole reason of protecting their bones, those who suffer from depression should get their bone mineral density checked out, the report's authors state.
READ MORE @ REUTERS
Nevertheless, while women shouldn't stop taking antidepressant drugs for the sole reason of protecting their bones, those who suffer from depression should get their bone mineral density checked out, the report's authors state.
READ MORE @ REUTERS
Monday, June 11, 2007
Big Headache for Big Pharma
By - Will Hall co-founder of the Freedom Center, and a member of the Icarus Project.
READ MORE @ Adbusters
Sunday, June 10, 2007
Potentially Incompatible Goals at F.D.A.
Safety and speed are the yin and yang of drug regulation. Patients want immediate access to breakthrough medicines but also want to believe the drugs are safe.
These goals can be incompatible. Race a drug to market and much is likely to remain unknown when patients take it. Test a drug thoroughly to assess all possible risks and its release may be delayed by years.
A series of drug-safety scandals has led many on Capitol Hill to question whether the Food and Drug Administration has failed to strike the right balance between speed and safety. A clear sign of this imbalance, these critics say, is the increasing number of F.D.A. drug-safety officers who say they have been punished or ignored after uncovering dangers of popular medicines.
READ MORE @ NY TIMES
These goals can be incompatible. Race a drug to market and much is likely to remain unknown when patients take it. Test a drug thoroughly to assess all possible risks and its release may be delayed by years.
A series of drug-safety scandals has led many on Capitol Hill to question whether the Food and Drug Administration has failed to strike the right balance between speed and safety. A clear sign of this imbalance, these critics say, is the increasing number of F.D.A. drug-safety officers who say they have been punished or ignored after uncovering dangers of popular medicines.
READ MORE @ NY TIMES
Saturday, June 9, 2007
Antidepressant Augmentation Can Be Useful in Treatment Resistant Elderly Patients
While the recovery rates of those receiving augmentation are not as high as in those who responded to first-line therapy, the recovery rates are still high enough to suggest that augmentation should be tried when older adults' depression is not improving
READ MORE @ RxPG NEWS
READ MORE @ RxPG NEWS
Friday, June 8, 2007
Swag from APA Conference
Above: The next time you reach for a tissue in the middle of a weepy therapy session, don't be surprised to see this reminder that depression is nothing to sneeze at. Effexor, an antidepressant, not only provides the tissue, but warns on the dispenser about rare side effects like life-threatening serotonin syndrome, sustained increases in blood pressure and "discontinuation symptoms" when people stop taking the drug.
READ MORE and see a slide show of more swag @ Wired News
Thursday, June 7, 2007
Depression with dysphoria may need two drug types
Findings from a small study suggest that combining an antidepressant with an anticonvulsive drug, a type of drug normally used to treat epilepsy, may be an effective treatment for patients with depression plus dysphoric mood, such as anger or hostility.
READ MORE @ REUTERS
READ MORE @ REUTERS
Wednesday, June 6, 2007
Khat use linked to psychiatric disorders
British researchers are calling for improved research into the stimulant plant khat and its possible association with psychiatric disorders.
Investigating the potential link between the African plant and mental illness is the first systematic review of the topic.
READ MORE @ SCENTA
Investigating the potential link between the African plant and mental illness is the first systematic review of the topic.
READ MORE @ SCENTA
Tuesday, June 5, 2007
Genetic variations may predispose some men to suicidal thoughts
Genetic variations may help explain why some men with depression develop suicidal thoughts and behaviors after they begin taking antidepressant medications, while most do not, according to a report in the June issue of Archives of General Psychiatry.
Although most patients with depression respond favorably to antidepressant medications, a very small subgroup may experience worse symptoms after beginning treatment, according to background information in the article.
“Regardless of treatment specificity, nearly all antidepressant medication studies find that some patients experience suicidality after treatment initiation,” the authors write. “Identification of this subpopulation before treatment would have tremendous clinical utility.”
READ MORE @ EUREKALERT
Although most patients with depression respond favorably to antidepressant medications, a very small subgroup may experience worse symptoms after beginning treatment, according to background information in the article.
“Regardless of treatment specificity, nearly all antidepressant medication studies find that some patients experience suicidality after treatment initiation,” the authors write. “Identification of this subpopulation before treatment would have tremendous clinical utility.”
READ MORE @ EUREKALERT
Monday, June 4, 2007
Antipsychotic Medicine Inspires Tuberculosis Drug
The antipsychotic medication chlorpromazine (Thorazine) can be used to treat tuberculosis, but it causes terrible side effects. Scientists at SRI International are using this knowledge as a starting point to develop a new tuberculosis drug. Their challenge is to find a chemical that kills Mycobacterium tuberculosis, the bacteria that causes tuberculosis, without causing restlessness and uncontrollable jitters that are brought on by the antipsychotic medication.
READ MORE @ Wired News
READ MORE @ Wired News
Antipsychotic Drug Use in Older Adults with Dementia
Antipsychotic drugs are widely used to manage behavioral and psychological symptoms in dementia despite concerns about their safety.
READ MORE @ Annals of Internal Medicine
READ MORE @ Science Daily
READ MORE @ Annals of Internal Medicine
READ MORE @ Science Daily
Sunday, June 3, 2007
SSRIs and Birth Defects: More Data Urgently Needed
There is a problem out there for prospective mothers and fathers. The problem is that instead of being able to find good information on the interplay between SSRIs (a group of antidepressants including Zoloft, Paxil and Prozac) and safe pregnancy, there is a big black void.
READ MORE @ LAWYERS & SETTLEMENTS
READ MORE @ LAWYERS & SETTLEMENTS
Saturday, June 2, 2007
Depression Risk Is Higher Among Battling Siblings
It could be that closeness with a sibling in childhood helps to develop skills in relating to peers that are taken into adult life or that lack of such closeness is an early sign of vulnerability to depression.
Poor sibling relationships in childhood may be an important and specific predictor of major depression in adulthood.
READ MORE @ Psychiatric News
Poor sibling relationships in childhood may be an important and specific predictor of major depression in adulthood.
READ MORE @ Psychiatric News
Friday, June 1, 2007
Sildenafil Effective for SRI Associated Sexual Dysfunction
Depressed women with serotonin reuptake inhibitor (SRI) antidepressant-associated sexual dysfunction are able to continue taking effective antidepressant treatment with sildenafil while avoiding sexual side effects.
READ MORE @ DOCTOR'S GUIDE
READ MORE @ DOCTOR'S GUIDE
Thursday, May 31, 2007
Consensus OCD Report Published
Leading international experts in obsessive compulsive disorder have published a new consensus report aimed at providing analysis and guidance to drive improved diagnosis and management of OCD worldwide.
Presented at The European Congress of Psychiatry, Madrid, 17-21 March 2007 and recently published in CNS Spectrums, the report has made a number of important recommendations including the removal of OCD from anxiety disorders to create its own category.
READ MORE @ PRNewswire
Presented at The European Congress of Psychiatry, Madrid, 17-21 March 2007 and recently published in CNS Spectrums, the report has made a number of important recommendations including the removal of OCD from anxiety disorders to create its own category.
READ MORE @ PRNewswire
Tuesday, May 29, 2007
Early Response to Antidepressant Treatment Predicts Remission
Patients with depression who have an early response with certain symptoms are more likely to have a sustained remission, investigators reported here at the American Psychiatric Association 2007 Annual Meeting.
"At 2 weeks, the improvement on the Hamilton Depression Rating Scale (HAMD) significantly predicted remission for key symptoms with both duloxetine and escitalopram," said principal investigator Martin Katz, PhD, clinical researcher, University of Texas Health Science Center, San Antonio, Texas, United States.
"Improvements for depressed mood, anxiety, and somatic symptoms significantly predicted remission for both treatments," Dr. Katz said in his presentation on May 21st.
READ MORE @ DOCTOR'S GUIDE
"At 2 weeks, the improvement on the Hamilton Depression Rating Scale (HAMD) significantly predicted remission for key symptoms with both duloxetine and escitalopram," said principal investigator Martin Katz, PhD, clinical researcher, University of Texas Health Science Center, San Antonio, Texas, United States.
"Improvements for depressed mood, anxiety, and somatic symptoms significantly predicted remission for both treatments," Dr. Katz said in his presentation on May 21st.
READ MORE @ DOCTOR'S GUIDE
Monday, May 28, 2007
Routine Metabolic Screening Is Necessary for Antipsychotic Treatment
Although antipsychotic treatment guidelines recommend routine metabolic screening, glucose and lipid profiles are not routinely being ordered at baseline by prescribing physicians in a patient population already at risk for diabetes and cardiovascular disease.
The purpose of the study was to evaluate the impact of abnormal laboratory test results on the selection of atypical antipsychotic treatment for patients whose lipids and fasting blood glucose (FBG) were being measured.
READ MORE @ DOCTOR'S GUIDE
The purpose of the study was to evaluate the impact of abnormal laboratory test results on the selection of atypical antipsychotic treatment for patients whose lipids and fasting blood glucose (FBG) were being measured.
READ MORE @ DOCTOR'S GUIDE
Sunday, May 27, 2007
Iloperidone Results Show Favorable Akathisia Profile
According to study results presented today at the 2007 American Psychiatric Association annual meeting, iloperidone, an investigational atypical antipsychotic, was shown to have a favorable akathisia profile.
Akathisia is a debilitating sensation of restlessness that manifests as an inability to sit still is a frequent side effect of antipsychotic medications. Iloperidone is being studied by Vanda Pharmaceuticals.
READ MORE @ MEDICAL NEWS TODAY
Akathisia is a debilitating sensation of restlessness that manifests as an inability to sit still is a frequent side effect of antipsychotic medications. Iloperidone is being studied by Vanda Pharmaceuticals.
READ MORE @ MEDICAL NEWS TODAY
Saturday, May 26, 2007
Poor Understanding Called Biggest Barrier to Antipsychotic Drug Adherence
The most common reasons patients don't adhere to antipsychotic regimens are poor insight into the nature of their illness, forgetfulness, and simply deciding to stop, surveyed physicians said....
"The other thing that can happen is that individuals can be lulled into a false sense of security. When they're doing particularly well, they think that perhaps they don't need to take their medication," he said. "One can stop taking medication in an illness like schizophrenia and not necessarily notice a change immediately."
READ MORE @ PSYCHIATRIC TIMES
"The other thing that can happen is that individuals can be lulled into a false sense of security. When they're doing particularly well, they think that perhaps they don't need to take their medication," he said. "One can stop taking medication in an illness like schizophrenia and not necessarily notice a change immediately."
READ MORE @ PSYCHIATRIC TIMES
Friday, May 25, 2007
Psychiatrists Want More Effective Antipsychotics
Pharmacotherapy for schizophrenia may be better than it's ever been, but it's not nearly good enough.
In a nationwide survey of psychiatrists, 95% said that there is a need for new, highly effective drug options, said Peter Buckley, M.D., of the Medical College of Georgia.
READ MORE @ PSYCHIATRIC TIMES
In a nationwide survey of psychiatrists, 95% said that there is a need for new, highly effective drug options, said Peter Buckley, M.D., of the Medical College of Georgia.
READ MORE @ PSYCHIATRIC TIMES
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