Worldview of Psychiatry January 1, 2004

Worldview of Psychiatry

Herbert Y. Meltzer, MD

J Clin Psychiatry 2004;65(1):138-139

Article Abstract

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Treatment of ideopathic psychotic disorders including schizophrenia and mania was revolutionized by the serendipitous discovery of the phenothiazines (initially, chlorpromazine) and subsequent development of the thioxanthenes (e.g., thiothixene), butyrophenes (e.g., haloperidol), and their congeners in the 1950s. Virtually all of these drugs block dopamine D2 receptors in direct correlation with their clinical potency as antipsychotic agents. However, these classic or “typical” neuroleptic agents regularly induce characteristic neurologic and endocrinologic side effects including dystonia, akathisia, bradykinesia, acute or late dyskinesias, and hyperprolactinemia.