Effects of Chlorpromazine in Patients with Hepatic Disease
- 30 August 1969
- Vol. 3 (5669) , 497-499
- https://doi.org/10.1136/bmj.3.5669.497
Abstract
Patients with cirrhosis were found to be extremely sensitive to chlorpromazine as shown by slowing of the electroencephalograph (E.E.G.), which was particularly definite in those who had had hepatic encephalopathy previously. Patients showing the most definite E.E.G. changes were in general very sleepy and took some hours to recover after taking chlorpromazine. It is concluded that phenothiazine drugs should be used very cautiously in patients with alcoholic liver disease.Keywords
This publication has 8 references indexed in Scilit:
- NEUROPSYCHIATRIC COMPLICATIONS OF PORTACAVAL ANASTOMOSISThe Lancet, 1961
- Morphine tolerance in hepatic cirrhosisGastroenterology, 1961
- NEUROPSYCHIATRIC COMPLICATIONS FOLLOWING CHLORO-THIAZIDE THERAPY IN PATIENTS WITH HEPATIC CIRRHOSIS - POSSIBLE RELATION TO HYPOKALAEMIA1959
- Treatment of the Acute Alcohol-Withdrawal SyndromeQuarterly Journal of Studies on Alcohol, 1958
- DELIRIUM TREMENSJAMA, 1958
- The measurement of ammonia in whole blood, erythrocytes, and plasma.1957
- Observations of Liver Function in Chlorpromazine-Treated Alcoholic PatientsNew England Journal of Medicine, 1957
- The Colorimetric Estimation of 3-Chlorpromazine in Biological FluidsJournal of Clinical Pathology, 1956