Antipsychotic medication: effects on regulation of glucose and lipids
- 1 October 2001
- journal article
- review article
- Published by Taylor & Francis in Expert Opinion on Pharmacotherapy
- Vol. 2 (10) , 1571-1582
- https://doi.org/10.1517/14656566.2.10.1571
Abstract
Since the introduction of chlorpromazine in the 1950s, antipsychotics have been used for the treatment of schizophrenia. The phenothiazines were followed by the butyrophenones, particularly haloperidol. With all the movement disorder side effects of these medications (extrapyramidal syndrome, akathisia, tardive dyskinesia), the pharmaceutical industry has gradually released atypical antipsychotics. This class includes clozapine (released in the USA in 1990), risperidone (1994), olanzapine (1996), quetiapine (1998) and ziprasidone (2001). However, the rate of diabetes mellitus in patients with schizophrenia appeared to increase with the availability of this class of medications. In reviewing rate and degree of changes in weight, glucose control and lipid levels induced by typical and atypical antipsychotics, it was found that in contrast to case reports, there is a dearth of retrospective, open and controlled studies. However, in studies as early as 1964, significant weight increases were found to be associated with use of chlorpromazine. While the phenothiazines may have some effect on patients with chemical diabetes, there is little evidence of the typical antipsychotics producing diabetes mellitus de novo, or worsening diabetes that is already been discovered. Ziprasidone appears to be the antipsychotic with the most beneficial combination of effects: no weight gain, no change in glucose utilisation and reductions in cholesterol and serum triglycerides (TGs).Keywords
This publication has 43 references indexed in Scilit:
- Clozapine, Diabetes Mellitus, Weight Gain, and Lipid Abnormalities: A Five-Year Naturalistic StudyAmerican Journal of Psychiatry, 2000
- A 28-week comparison of ziprasidone and haloperidol in outpatients with stable schizophreniaEuropean Neuropsychopharmacology, 1999
- Weight GainJournal of Clinical Psychopharmacology, 1999
- Ziprasidone 80 mg/day and 160 mg/day in the Acute Exacerbation of Schizophrenia and Schizoaffective Disorder A 6-Week Placebo-Controlled TrialNeuropsychopharmacology, 1999
- Diabetic ketoacidosis and clozapinePublished by Oxford University Press (OUP) ,1998
- Hepatitis, hyperglycemia, pleural effusion, eosinophilia, hematuria and proteinuria occurring early in clozapine treatmentInternational Clinical Psychopharmacology, 1998
- Ketoacidosis as a side‐effect of clozapine: a case reportActa Psychiatrica Scandinavica, 1996
- Chlorpromazine-induced vanishing bile duct syndrome leading to biliary cirrhosisHepatology, 1994
- Effect of Prolonged Trifluoperazine, Imipramine and Haloperidol Administration on Serum CholesterolPharmacology, 1976
- Weight Changes With Schizophrenic Psychosis and Psychotropic Drug TherapyPsychosomatics, 1970