Caffeine Research Today is a free monthly online journal that collates and summarizes the latest research about Caffeine, including details on addiction, drugs, effects, coffee. | ||||||||
|
Clozapine-resistant psychosis, smoking, and caffeine: managing the neglected effects of substances that our patients consume every day.Dratcu L, Grandison A, McKay G, Bamidele A, Vasudevan V York Clinic, Guy's Hospital, Southwark Division of Inpatient Psychiatry, South London and Maudsley NHS Trust, London, United Kingdom. luiz.dratcu@slam.nhs.uk More than 30% of patients with psychotic disorders who are refractory to antipsychotic treatment also fail to respond to clozapine. Despite the high prevalence of smoking and caffeine use in the psychiatric population, these habits are usually overlooked as factors contributing to antipsychotic treatment failure. We describe 2 male patients with severe treatment-resistant psychosis, one with schizophrenia and the other with bipolar affective disorder-both of whom smoked heavily, and the latter also consumed enormous amounts of caffeine-whose symptoms were refractory to clozapine. Both patients experienced a major, sustained amelioration of their psychotic symptoms when clozapine treatment was recommenced under supervision in the inpatient setting and the pharmacological interactions between clozapine, smoking, and caffeine were considered. Therapeutic strategies included gradual increases in daily doses of clozapine, monitoring clozapine plasma levels, using single daily doses of clozapine at night, and augmenting clozapine treatment with low doses of amisulpride, a selective antagonist at the dopamine D2 and D3 receptors. Smoking and excessive caffeine use are associated with poor therapeutic responses to clozapine and should be considered in the pharmacological management of treatment-refractory psychosis, regardless of the primary diagnosis. Published 22 May 2007 in Am J Ther, 14(3): 314-8.
© 2004-2008 Caffeine Research Today. All Rights Reserved. |
| ||||||