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Query: UMLS:C0025362 (
mental retardation
)
15,878
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Thioridazine
and visual screening procedures are effective in reducing the stereotypic behaviors of individuals with
mental retardation
. A double-blind, placebo-controlled study, using alternating treatments within a multiple-baseline across subjects design, was conducted to assess the effects of two doses of thioridazine (1.25 and 2.5 mg/kg/day) and visual screening, alone and combined, on stereotypy and social behavior of three individuals with profound mental retardation. Functional analyses did not show demand, alone, social attention, or differential reinforcement conditions to maintain the subjects' stereotypy.
Thioridazine
was effective in producing modest reductions in stereotypy and minor increases in social behavior across subjects. The higher dose of thioridazine (2.5 mg/kg/day) was slightly more effective than the lower dose (1.25 mg/kg/day), and thioridazine plus visual screening was more effective than thioridazine alone. The most effective treatment was visual screening when used in the absence of thioridazine. This study demonstrates a method for assessing the impact of psychopharmacological and behavioral interventions in individuals for whom a behavioral treatment cannot be easily derived from a functional analysis of the maintaining conditions of the target behavior.
...
PMID:Effects of thioridazine and visual screening on stereotypy and social behavior in individuals with mental retardation. 831 80
Neuroleptic and anticonvulsant drugs are used to reduce the occurrence of aberrant behaviors, seizures, or both in individuals with
mental retardation
. However, their use may disrupt the learning of desired skills, and the extent to which anatomical (e.g., microencephaly) or biochemical abnormalities or both in such individuals alter the effects of drugs on learning is not known. In this study, the effects of neuroleptics and anticonvulsants on learning and performance in a repeated acquisition task in methylazoxymethanol-induced microencephalic and saline control rats were assessed.
Thioridazine
was more potent in microencephalic rats than in control rats in increasing errors and decreasing response rates. Clozapine was equally potent in both microencephalic and control rats in increasing errors and decreasing response rates. The effect of carbamazepine was biphasic in both rat groups: Low doses decreased errors and increased response rates, whereas higher doses did the opposite.
...
PMID:Effects of neuroleptic and anticonvulsant drugs on repeated acquisition learning in microencephalic and normal rats. 938 59