Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0036341 (schizophrenia)
60,220 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Plasma concentrations of bromperidol (BRP) and reduced bromperidol (RBRP) were determined in 31 patients with schizophrenia who were administered BRP for their psychiatric symptoms. Activities of carbonyl reductase in red blood cells were assayed using BRP as a substrate. Plasma concentrations of BRP and RBRP ranged from 2.2 to 23.5 ng/mL and from 0.2 to 8.2 ng/mL, respectively. RBRP-to-BRP ratios in plasma ranged from 0.01 to 0.94 (mean +/- SD: 0.31 +/- 0.20), values notably lower than the previously reported values of reduced haloperidol to haloperidol (HAL) in the plasma from patients on HAL. The activity of BRP reductase in red blood cells was determined as 6.8-12.3 pmol/hr/10(6) red blood cells, which was at approximately the same level as that of HAL reductase. Patients with positive responses to BRP treatment were evaluated using the Brief Psychiatric Rating Scale. We found that the number of patients who had a positive response to BRP did not increase after BRP plasma levels had reached the level of 12 ng/mL. This finding suggests that a therapeutic plateau in BRP pharmacotherapy of schizophrenia occurs, and there is no advantage to raising the dose once this plateau is reached.
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PMID:Interindividual variation in bromperidol metabolism and relationship to therapeutic effects. 1077 Apr 55

Tetrabenazine (TBZ; Xenazine) is a potent, selective, reversible depletor of monoamines from nerve terminals. TBZ inhibits the vesicular monoamine transporter type 2 which, in humans, is expressed nearly exclusively in the brain. TBZ is rapidly metabolized in the liver by carbonyl reductase to stereoisomers of hydrotetrabenazine, some of which are potent inhibitors of vesicular monoamine transporter type 2. Initially developed in the 1950s for schizophrenia, since the 1970s several publications have reported on the efficacy of TBZ in the treatment of various hyperkinetic movement disorders. Although quite effective in controlling the involuntary movements, there were considerable inter-individual differences in the optimal dose, defined as the dose judged by the investigator to provide the greatest efficacy with minimal or tolerable adverse events. This variability is in part owing to differences in severity and mechanism of the target symptoms and to variable activity of the enzyme carbonyl reductase that metabolizes TBZ to its active metabolites. Dose-limiting adverse events, consisting mainly of sedation, parkinsonism, akathisia and depression, are usually rapidly reversible upon dosage reduction. In addition to its established antichorea efficacy in Huntington's disease, the drug has been reported to also be effective in a variety of other hyperkinetic movement disorders, including tardive dyskinesia and tics associated with Tourette's syndrome.
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PMID:Tetrabenazine for the treatment of chorea and other hyperkinetic movement disorders. 2201 29