People with Schizophrenia
Gain by Practice, Not Meds
(October 15, 2007) -- MANHASSET, N.Y., (UPI via COMTEX) -- A U.S.
study suggested cognitive gains in schizophrenic patients treated with newer
antipsychotic medications are due to practice effects, not the drugs.
Second-generation antipsychotic medicines were designed to improve the
speed, clarity, and rationality of thought among people with
schizophrenia and other psychotic illnesses.
But psychiatric researchers at the Zucker Hillside Hospital and the
Feinstein Institute for Medical Research studied the cognitive performance
of 104 people newly diagnosed with schizophrenia who were taking
second-generation medicines.
The medical scientists tracked those patients and 84 healthy, age-matched
controls on 18 measures of thinking by asking them to take a series of
cognitive tests three times during a four-month period. At the end of that
time, the researchers found both the patients and the healthy controls
showed the same cognitive gains.
The study's lead author, Terry Goldberg, said: "It is a sobering finding
(since) the field has just accepted that these medicines enhance cognition.
But it may be that (patients are just) getting better at doing the same test
over time.
"If it's just a practice effect, it is a big problem," he added.
The study appears in the Archives of General Psychiatry.
Source: United Press International
Last updated: 10/07
top ~
next ~
news table of contents ~
send page to a
friend
|