Side Effects:
Schizophrenia Treatments Still Far From Ideal
(October 3, 2005) -- The
mentally ill
have been tortured throughout history. Many past cultures interpreted the
delusions of schizophrenics as signs of demonic possession. In some cases
holes were drilled in their skulls so that evil spirits could escape.
The Romans used electric eels to shock such people. They also used
starvation and flogging to subdue unruly patients.
During the Middle Ages, people were jailed, chained or put in stocks.
Women might be burned at the stake as witches.
In the 20th century, physicians administered electroshock therapy or
injected high doses of insulin to induce seizures. In 1946, the lobotomy was
developed. In this procedure, the frontal lobe of the brain was surgically
destroyed with a tool like an ice pick. Lobotomies were widely used because
they calmed agitated people and made them docile.
In the 1950s, drugs for schizophrenia were hailed as a humane advance in
the treatment of mental illness.
Chlorpromazine (Thorazine),
haloperidol (Haldol)
and
thioridazine (Mellaril) became the standard
treatments for
schizophrenia.
The drugs reduced agitation and helped control
hallucinations. Some
mental-health experts believed that these medications would empty the back
wards of mental institutions. In the 1970s, patients were discharged from
psychiatric hospitals to the community under the false assumption that on
these drugs they could lead almost-normal lives.
Experts didn’t foresee how
unpleasant the side effects of these medicines
would be. Many patients found the drugs so sedating that they felt like
zombies. They escaped “ice pick” surgery only to experience a “chemical
lobotomy.”
Others discovered that after months or years of treatment, they developed
uncontrollable muscle twitches or tics that were often irreversible, even
after stopping the drugs. Other side effects included dizziness, urinary
retention, dry mouth, constipation, blurred vision, nasal stuffiness, heart
palpitations, fainting, sexual problems and seizures.
Such drugs as chlorpromazine can also cause akathisia, a profound
restlessness that makes it hard for people to sit still. They feel as if
they are about to jump out of their skin.
In the 1990s, a new class of antipsychotics was introduced with great
expectations. Such medications as
Clozaril and
Zyprexa seemed less likely to
cause troublesome side effects. These “atypical antipsychotics” were
followed by other new-generation schizophrenia medications, such as
Risperdal,
Seroquel and
Geodon.
Although very expensive, often costing hundreds of dollars a month, these
drugs rapidly replaced such older generic drugs as
chlorpromazine or
perphenazine. However, a new study demonstrates that the more recent drugs
are not much of an advance.
When compared with old-fashioned perphenazine, several new drugs were no
more effective or better-tolerated. Zyprexa was somewhat better, but it can
cause serious weight gain that may predispose patients to diabetes and heart
disease. Over the course of 18 months, nearly three-fourths of patients
stopped taking their medicines because of lack of effectiveness or
intolerable side effects.
Although we no longer burn mental patients at the stake or perform
lobotomies, this new research demonstrates that our treatments for
schizophrenia are still far from ideal.
Last updated: 10/05
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