Autor: |
Jeste, Dilip V., Gilbert, Patricia L., McAdams, Lou Ann, Harris, M. Jackuelyn |
Zdroj: |
Archives of General Psychiatry; March 1995, Vol. 52 Issue: 3 p209-212, 4p |
Abstrakt: |
What is the nature of the bioelectrical and biochemical perturbations... which constitute the physical ground of psychotic states? How do our drugs act on these perturbations? It is difficult at present to take a stand, since later on it might be absolutely senseless on a more refined plane. Henri Laborit (1960)1The ABOVE statement by the French surgeon who discovered the psychotropic effects of chlorpromazine is still valid 35 years later. While we know a lot more today about the pathophysiology of schizophrenia and other psychoses and about the mechanism of action of neuroleptic drugs than we did in 1960, there is yet much more that is unknown. Our lack of adequate understanding in these areas is reflected clinically in the history of wide fluctuations in the practice of neuroleptic use over the past four decades. In the years following the introduction of neuroleptic drugs into psychiatric practice, these drugs |
Databáze: |
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