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Query: UMLS:C0085631 (
agitation
)
12,064
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
When treating patients with manic states, the physician has to deal with at least two main Issues. First, the therapeutic decision has to be rapid because of the unpredictability of its immediate course. This concerns often results in polypharmacy with adjunct treatments. However, the therapeutic choice has to be cautious since part of the treatment will be maintained for prophylaxis. According to recent guidelines, the use of monotherapy with mood stabilisers during acute manic states concerns only few patients with mostly hypomania to moderate
mania
. Up to date, antipsychotics and benzodiazepines are considered as adjunct treatment in
mania
with psychotic symptoms or hostility. However, survey studies show that antipsychotics are widely used as adjunct treatments to mood stabilisers, indeed beyond the indications held by the guidelines. Our objective was to describe the clinical situations justifying the addition of an adjunct treatment during acute
mania
and to clear up from published data, the advantages and the inconveniences of combining antipsychotics and/or benzodiazepines with a mood stabilisers in order to define differentiated indications.
Mania
associated with either
agitation
, sleep disturbances or psychotic symptoms requires most of the time to combine mood stabiliser and respectively, sedative and/or anxiolytic, hypnotic or anti-psychotic treatments. Patients suffering from
mania
associated with other disorders need specific treatment adjustment and combination related to their medical condition. Adjunctive conventional antipsychotic remains widely used in first intention treatment. The conventional antipsychotic is often prescribed alone in the first weeks prior to the association with a mood stabiliser. Nevertheless there are controversies in the literature about their efficiency and their delay of action with regard to other treatments. When the conventional antipsychotic is a part of their initial treatment, manic patients remain taking them when discharged from hospital and are still taking them after 6 Months in a great percentage of the cases. The adverse events with conventional antipsychotic are numerous and severe enough in bipolar patients to restrict their use in first intention mainly to psychotic
mania
. Moreover, there are evidences for higher sensitivity to adverse effects of the conventional antipsychotics in manic patients. When
agitation
in acute
mania
requires an adjunct to mood stabiliser, the conventional antipsychotic treatment could be use for over-excitation without catatonic features and with particular care with the risk of akathisia. Long term effects of conventional antipsychotics, especially on depressive recurrences, should argue to stop them as soon as possible. Since the safety of adjunctive new antipsychotics with mood stabilisers seems until now acceptable, its indication should be limited to acute psychotic manias. Adjunctive benzodiazepine, should be evaluated in the various types of
mania
with specific concerns with comorbidity frequently met in consultation-liaison psychiatry. Benzodiazepines plus mood stabilisers may be the treatment of choice for the manias in which anxious state, catatonic symptoms or sleeplessness.
...
PMID:[Adjunct treatments in acute mania]. 1502 80
Low and medium potency benzodiazepines were initially introduced for the treatment of insomnia and anxiety. Their therapeutic actions as anxiolytics, sedative hypnotics, anticonvulsants, and muscle relaxants (with their low toxicity) have led to their use as first-line treatments, and they have become one of the most prescribed classes of drugs. Novel therapeutic uses of benzodiazepines were discovered with the introduction of the high-potency benzodiazepines (e.g., alprazolam, clonazepam, and lorazepam). They were found to be effective in treating panic disorder and panic attacks with or without agoraphobia, as add-on therapy to selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors in the treatment of obsessive-compulsive disorder and panic disorders, and as adjunctive therapy in treating patients with acute
mania
or acute
agitation
. High-potency benzodiazepines have replaced low and medium potency benzodiazepines in all benzodiazepine clinical indications due to their greater therapeutic effects and rapid onset of action. Differences in distribution, elimination half-life, and rate of absorption are important considerations when choosing a high-potency benzodiazepine. Typically, a benzodiazepine with long distribution and elimination half-lives is preferred. A maximum dose of 2 mg/day of any of the high-potency benzodiazepines when given for more than 1 week is recommended. Although as a class benzodiazepines act rapidly and are well tolerated, their use presents clinical issues such as dependence, rebound anxiety, memory impairment, and discontinuation syndrome.
...
PMID:Issues in the clinical use of benzodiazepines: potency, withdrawal, and rebound. 1507 12
(1) Lithium is the first-line treatment for patients with acute
mania
. For patients with psychosis or intense
agitation
, an oral neuroleptic can be added (haloperidol or chlorpromazine, the best-assessed drugs of this class). (2) The licensed indications for oral olanzapine, a neuroleptic, explicitly mention the treatment of acute
mania
. (3) The clinical evaluation dossier on olanzapine in this setting (10 mg to 15 mg/day) is not particularly impressive. In particular, clinical trials included patients with a variety of associated psychotic symptoms. (4) The only comparative trial against another neuroleptic, haloperidol at a high starting dose (10 mg), showed that olanzapine was no more effective. The same applies to a trial comparing olanzapine with disodium valproate. (5) One placebo-controlled trial tested olanzapine as an additional treatment in patients who did not respond adequately to lithium or valproate disodium. Olanzapine potentiated the antimanic effects of the original treatment but also increased the incidence of adverse effects. (6) In patients with acute
mania
, the main adverse effects of olanzapine are drowsiness, weight gain, dizziness, and dry mouth. In the trial comparing olanzapine with haloperidol, olanzapine caused fewer extrapyramidal side effects but more weight gain than haloperidol. (7) Olanzapine costs 20 times more than haloperidol in France. (8) In practice, olanzapine is just another neuroleptic approved for the treatment of acute
mania
in patients with psychotic symptoms and
agitation
. There is no evidence that olanzapine has the best risk-benefit ratio in this category.
...
PMID:Olanzapine: new indication. New indication in acute mania: just another neuroleptic. 1514 54
(1) The intramuscular neuroleptic of choice for the treatment of agitated schizophrenic patients and patients with acute
mania
is haloperidol, at a dose of 5 mg. Olanzapine is now marketed in France for hospital use in both these indications. (2) In two comparative trials in patients with schizophrenia, olanzapine 10 mg was shown to be no better than haloperidol 7.5 mg (a high dose). Control of
agitation
was satisfactory in three-quarters of patients after a single injection of either neuroleptic. (3) Olanzapine has not been compared with other neuroleptics in the treatment of acute
mania
. In one trial, olanzapine acted faster than lorazepam for injection (used at a rather low dose). (4) In one trial, patients given olanzapine had a lower incidence of acute dystonia and extrapyramidal symptoms (about 1%) than patients given haloperidol (about 6-7%), but the haloperidol dose (7.5 mg) was higher than recommended in the SPC (5 mg). The incidence of postural hypotension was significantly higher among patients given olanzapine (about 12%) compared with haloperidol (about 3%). (5) In practice, haloperidol remains the intramuscular neuroleptic of choice for the treatment of agitated patients with schizophrenia or acute
mania
.
...
PMID:Olanzapine for injection: new formulation. No advantage in agitated patients. 1523 44
Bipolar disorder is a severe and recurrent disorder. Atypical antipsychotics have emerged as both an alternative and adjunct to conventional mood stabilisers. The manic phase of the illness is the best studied, and it appears that a class effect with regards to efficacy is present in both monotherapy and augmentation studies. Evidence for efficacy of atypical antipsychotics in depression is emerging. At this stage controlled data are available for both olanzapine and quetiapine. Maintenance data demonstrating efficacy are available for olanzapine. Atypical antipsychotics have utility in treating acute
agitation
and aggression in manic episodes of bipolar disorder. Subgroup analyses from trials treating manic phase bipolar disorder, and an open-label study of rapid cycling, have suggested that atypical antipsychotics may be useful for the treatment of mixed states and rapid cycling. Several studies have suggested that atypical antipsychotics may be useful in treatment-refractory episodes of bipolar disorder. The current available data suggest greater efficacy of the atypical antipsychotics in
mania
than in depression, although the data are fairly clear that induction of depression is not an issue with the atypical antipsychotics. A number of trials are underway that will hopefully address many of the questions still pending.
...
PMID:Efficacy of atypical antipsychotics in bipolar disorder. 1563 44
Recombinant preparations of the cytokine interferon (IFN)-alpha are increasingly used to treat a number of medical conditions, including chronic viral hepatitis and several malignancies. Although frequently effective, IFN alpha induces a variety of neuropsychiatric adverse effects, including an acute confusional state that develops rapidly after initiation of high-dose IFN alpha, a depressive syndrome that develops more slowly over weeks to months of treatment, and manic conditions most often characterised by extreme irritability and
agitation
, but also occasionally by euphoria. Acute IFN alpha-induced confusional states are typically characterised by disorientation, lethargy, somnolence, psychomotor retardation, difficulties with speaking and writing, parkinsonism and psychotic symptoms. Strategies for managing delirium should be employed, including treatment of contributing medical conditions, use of either typical or atypical antipsychotic agents and avoidance of medications likely to worsen mental status. Significant depressive symptoms occur in 21-58% of patients receiving IFN alpha, with symptoms typically manifesting over the first several months of treatment. The most replicated risk factor for developing depression is the presence of mood and anxiety symptoms prior to treatment. Other potential, but less frequently replicated, risk factors include a past history of major depression, being female and increasing IFN alpha dosage and treatment duration. The available data support two approaches to the pharmacological management of IFN alpha-induced depression: antidepressant pretreatment or symptomatic treatment once IFN alpha has been initiated. Pretreatment might be best reserved for patients already receiving antidepressants or for patients who endorse depression or anxiety symptoms of mild or greater severity prior to therapy. Several recent studies demonstrate that antidepressants effectively treat IFN alpha-induced depression once it has developed, allowing the vast majority of subjects to complete treatment successfully. Recent data suggest that IFN alpha-induced depression may be composed of two overlapping syndromes: a depression-specific syndrome characterised by mood, anxiety and cognitive complaints, and a neurovegetative syndrome characterised by fatigue, anorexia, pain and psychomotor slowing. Depression-specific symptoms are highly responsive to serotonergic antidepressants, whereas neurovegetative symptoms are significantly less responsive to these agents. These symptoms may be more effectively treated by agents that modulate catecholaminergic functioning, such as combined serotonin-noradrenaline (norepinephrine) antidepressants, bupropion, psychostimulants or modafinil. Additional factors to consider in selecting an antidepressant include potential drug-drug interactions and adverse effect profile. Finally, IFN alpha appears capable of inducing manic symptoms.
Mania
, especially when severe, is a clinical emergency. When this occurs, IFN alpha and antidepressants should be stopped, an emergency psychiatric consultation should be obtained, and treatment with a mood stabilizer should be initiated.
...
PMID:Neuropsychiatric adverse effects of interferon-alpha: recognition and management. 1569 25
Intramuscular olanzapine (Zyprexa) is a rapid-acting atypical antipsychotic drug that is also indicated for use in patients with
agitation
associated with schizophrenia or bipolar
mania
, the focus of this review. Evidence from three well designed trials indicates that this formulation of olanzapine is at least as effective as intramuscular haloperidol or lorazepam in the treatment of patients with acute
agitation
associated with schizophrenia or bipolar
mania
, and has a faster onset of action. Although transient reductions in blood pressure and heart rate may occur in some patients administered intramuscular olanzapine, preliminary evidence of a general lack of clinical effect on the corrected QT (QTc) interval and a low incidence of extrapyramidal symptoms (EPS) is promising. The parenteral formulation of olanzapine appears to offer an effective, fast-acting and generally well tolerated alternative in the treatment of this significant behavioural problem.
...
PMID:Intramuscular olanzapine: a review of its use in the management of acute agitation. 1569 28
The frequency, phenomenology, and risk factors of hallucinations and delusions were investigated in 64 consecutive inpatients with Parkinson's disease. Fifty patients were admitted to our hospital with symptoms related to Parkinson's disease: psychiatric problems 27 (psychosis 22; anxiety 2; depression 2;
mania
1): motor symptoms, 20 (wearing-off 5; akinesia 4; freezing 4; postural instability 4; dyskinesia 2; tremor 2; dystonia 1), and sensory symptoms, 3. Fourteen patients were admitted with other medical problems (pneumonia 4; cerebral infarction 3; bone fracture 3; lumbago 2; seizure 1; cat bite 1). Totally 49 patients had psychiatric problems. Psychosis was present in 43 patients, dementia in 10, depression in 8,
mania
in 1, anxiety in 10,
agitation
in 6, stereotypy in 2, and hypersexuality in 2. Of the 43 patients with psychoses, 40 presented with visual hallucinations, 18 with auditory hallucinations, and 23 with delusions. To determine what the clinical correlates with the severity of psychosis were, we divided the patients into 3 groups: the severe group, 22 patients admitted because of psychotic symptoms; the mild group, 21 patients admitted because of problems other than psychosis but presenting psychotic symptoms; and the control group, 21 patients who had no psychotic symptoms. Incidences of auditory hallucinations and delusions were higher in the severe group as compared to the mild group. Patients in the severe group had higher Hoehn-Yahr stages, lower Mini-Mental State Examination scores, decreased H/M ratios of cardiac 123I-MIBG uptake, and lower frequencies of background activity on electroencephalograms. There were no differences in age at admission, age at onset of Parkinson's disease, duration of illness, amounts of levodopa and dopamine agonists received, Hamilton's depression rating scores, and brain MR findings, including atrophy and ischemic changes. Emergence of psychotic symptoms in parkinsonian patients appears to be clearly associated with impaired cognitive function. Therefore, it may be associated with the disease process itself. Terms such as dopaminomimetic or levodopa-induced psychosis may not be appropriate when describing psychosis in Parkinson's disease.
...
PMID:[Psychoses in patients with Parkinson's disease; their frequency, phenomenology, and clinical correlates]. 1571 92
Acute
agitation
occurs in a variety of medical and psychiatric conditions, and when severe can result in behavioural dyscontrol. Rapid tranquillisation is the assertive use of medication to calm severely agitated patients quickly, decrease dangerous behaviour and allow treatment of the underlying condition. Intramuscular injections of typical antipsychotics and benzodiazepines, given alone or in combination, have been the treatment of choice over the past few decades. Haloperidol and lorazepam are the most widely used agents for acute
agitation
, are effective in a wide diagnostic arena and can be used in medically compromised patients. Haloperidol can cause significant extrapyramidal symptoms, and has rarely been associated with cardiac arrhythmia and sudden death. Lorazepam can cause ataxia, sedation and has additive effects with other CNS depressant drugs.Recently, two fast-acting preparations of atypical antipsychotics, intramuscular ziprasidone and intramuscular olanzapine, have been developed for treatment of acute
agitation
. Intramuscular ziprasidone has shown significant calming effects emerging 30 minutes after administration for acutely agitated patients with schizophrenia and other nonspecific psychotic conditions. Intramuscular ziprasidone is well tolerated and has gained widespread use in psychiatric emergency services since its introduction in 2002. In comparison with other atypical antipsychotics, ziprasidone has a relatively greater propensity to increase the corrected QT (QTc) interval and, therefore, should not be used in patients with known QTc interval-associated conditions. Intramuscular olanzapine has shown faster onset of action, greater efficacy and fewer adverse effects than haloperidol or lorazepam in the treatment of acute
agitation
associated with schizophrenia, schizoaffective disorder, bipolar
mania
and dementia. Intramuscular olanzapine has been shown to have distinct calming versus nonspecific sedative effects. The recent reports of adverse events (including eight fatalities) associated with intramuscular olanzapine underscores the need to follow strict prescribing guidelines and avoid simultaneous use with other CNS depressants. Both intramuscular ziprasidone and intramuscular olanzapine have shown ease of transition to same-agent oral therapy once the episode of acute
agitation
has diminished. No randomised, controlled studies have examined either agent in patients with severe
agitation
, drug-induced states or significant medical comorbidity. Current clinical experience and one naturalistic study with intramuscular ziprasidone suggest that it is efficacious and can be safely used in such populations. These intramuscular atypical antipsychotics may represent a historical advance in the treatment of acute
agitation
.
...
PMID:Pharmacological management of acute agitation. 1591 48
Antipsychotics are commonly used in bipolar disorder, both for acute
mania
and in maintenance treatment. The authors review available clinical research concerning the use of both conventional and atypical antipsychotics in bipolar disorder and present recommendations for a number of key clinical situations based on this review. They also consider a number of important related questions, including whether there is evidence for an increased risk of tardive dyskinesia (TD) in patients with bipolar disorder, the potential role for antipsychotics in the treatment of bipolar depression, the role of antipsychotics in maintenance treatment of bipolar disorder, the potential for antipsychotics to induce depression in bipolar illness, and whether antipsychotics can be considered mood stabilizers with a place as monotherapy for bipolar
mania
. They conclude that standard treatment for acute
mania
should begin with a mood stabilizer, with benzodiazepines used as an adjunct for mild
agitation
or insomnia and antipsychotics used as an adjunct for highly agitated, psychotic, or severely manic patients. They also conclude that atypical antipsychotics are preferable to conventional antispychotics because of their more favorable side effect profile and reduced risk of tardive dyskinesia. They review the evidence for using atypical antipsychotics as first-line monotherapy for
mania
and conclude that more evidence concerning the risk of TD and their efficacy as maintenance treatment in bipolar disorder is needed before a conclusion can be made. Should the eventual risk of TD associated with atypical antipsychotics be found to be minimal and their efficacy in maintenance treatment found to be high, they could eventually be considered first line monotherapy for bipolar disorder. They conclude that treatment with an antipsychotic during bipolar depression should be limited to those patients who have psychosis and that atypical antipsychotics are preferred over conventional antipsychotics in this situation, not only because of their reduced risk of side effects but also because theoretically they may have antidepressant efficacy due to their effects on the serotonin system. The clinical research findings summarized in the article are, for the most part, supported by a recently published guideline based on a consensus of clinical experts.
...
PMID:Clinical research on antipsychotics in bipolar disorder. 1599 Apr 92
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