How Is Schizophrenia
Treated?
Since schizophrenia may not be a
single condition and its causes are not yet known, current treatment methods
are based on both clinical research and experience. These approaches are chosen
on the basis of their ability to reduce the symptoms of schizophrenia and to lessen the chances that
symptoms will return.
What About Medications?
Antipsychotic medications have been available since the mid-1950s. They have
greatly improved the outlook for individual patients. These medications reduce
the psychotic symptoms of
schizophrenia and usually allow the patient to function more effectively
and appropriately. Antipsychotic drugs are the best treatment now available,
but they do not cure schizophrenia or ensure that there will be no
further psychotic episodes. The choice and dosage of medication can be made
only by a qualified physician who is well trained in the medical treatment of
mental disorders. The dosage of medication is individualized for each patient,
since people may vary a great deal in the amount of drug needed to reduce
symptoms without producing troublesome side effects.
The large majority of people with schizophrenia show substantial improvement
when treated with antipsychotic drugs. Some patients, however, are not helped
very much by the medications and a few do not seem to need them. It is
difficult to predict which patients will fall into these two groups and to
distinguish them from the large majority of patients who do benefit from
treatment with antipsychotic drugs.
A number of new antipsychotic drugs (the so-called atypical
antipsychotics) have been introduced since 1990. The first of these,
clozapine (Clozaril®), has been shown to be more effective than other
antipsychotics, although the possibility of severe side effects in
particular, a condition called agranulocytosis (loss of the white blood cells
that fight infection) requires that patients be monitored with blood
tests every one or two weeks. Even newer antipsychotic drugs, such as
risperidone (Risperdal®) and olanzapine (Zyprexa®), are safer than the
older drugs or clozapine, and they also may be better tolerated. They may or
may not treat the illness as well as clozapine, however. Several additional
antipsychotics are currently under development.
Antipsychotic drugs are often very effective in treating certain symptoms of
schizophrenia, particularly hallucinations and
delusions; unfortunately, the
drugs may not be as helpful with other symptoms, such as reduced motivation and
emotional expressiveness. Indeed, the older antipsychotics (which also went by
the name of neuroleptics), medicines like haloperidol (Haldol®)
or chlorpromazine (Thorazine®), may even produce side effects that resemble
the more difficult to treat symptoms. Often, lowering the dose or switching to
a different medicine may reduce these side effects; the newer medicines,
including olanzapine (Zyprexa®), quetiapine (Seroquel®), and
risperidone (Risperdal®), appear less likely to have this problem.
Sometimes when people with schizophrenia become depressed, other symptoms can
appear to worsen. The symptoms may improve with the addition of an
antidepressant medication.
Patients and families sometimes become worried about the antipsychotic
medications used to treat schizophrenia. In addition to concern about side
effects, they may worry that such drugs could lead to addiction. However,
antipsychotic medications do not produce a high (euphoria) or
addictive behavior in people who take them.
Another misconception about antipsychotic drugs is that they act as a kind
of mind control, or a chemical straitjacket. Antipsychotic drugs
used at the appropriate dosage do not knock out people or take away
their free will. While these medications can be sedating, and while this effect
can be useful when treatment is initiated particularly if an individual is
quite agitated, the utility of the drugs is not due to sedation but to their
ability to diminish the
hallucinations, agitation, confusion, and delusions of a psychotic episode.
Thus, antipsychotic medications should eventually help an individual with
schizophrenia to deal with the world more rationally.
top | next - more about medications
also in this section: treatment
overview | antipsychotic meds
med side-effects | psychotherapy
home | schizophrenia defined |
causes | treatment
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