A comparison of some physiological and psychological effects of Motival (fluphenazine and nortriptyline) and diazepam in normal subjects.

Abstract
1 The effects in normal subjects of a single oral dose of Motival (one tablet, containing fluphenazine 0.5 mg and nortriptyline 10 mg) on the contingent negative variation (CNV), reaction time, heart rate, blood pressure and self-rating scales for alertness, anxiety, tension, detachment and depression were compared with those of diazepam (5 mg and 7.5 mg) and placebo or propranolol (60 mg). 2 After diazepam (5 mg: twelve subjects and 7.5 mg: seven subjects) there was a significant decrease in CNV magnitude while after Motival (twelve subjects) there was no significant alteration in CNV magnitude compared to placebo. 3 After diazepam (7.5 mg: seven subjects) there was also a fall in subjective ratings for alertness and tension; this fall was significantly greater than the changes after Motival which did not reduce subjective ratings for alterness or tension below "average" levels. Anxiety ratings did not differ significantly between the two drugs. Changes after propranolol were intermediate in all scales. 4 It is concluded that under these conditions diazepam caused central nervous system depression while Motival did not.