olanzapine and clopenthixol-acetate-ester

olanzapine has been researched along with clopenthixol-acetate-ester* in 2 studies

Other Studies

2 other study(ies) available for olanzapine and clopenthixol-acetate-ester

ArticleYear
Olanzapine intramuscular shows better efficacy than zuclopenthixol acetate intramuscular in reducing the need for restraint, but not in comparison to haloperidol intramuscular.
    International clinical psychopharmacology, 2022, 01-01, Volume: 37, Issue:1

    Many psychotic patients are treated with antipsychotic medications during acute agitation and aggressive behavior episodes in an attempt to achieve a rapid calming effect. Those medications include olanzapine, zuclopenthixol acetate, and haloperidol intramuscular administration. This study compared the effectiveness of these injections in reducing the need for restraint during agitated-psychotic episodes that include aggression. Sociodemographical and clinical data were retrieved from the electronic medical records of 179 patients who needed rapid calming while hospitalized in a mental health center with acute psychosis. The treatments administered were olanzapine intramuscular, zuclopenthixol acetate intramuscular, and haloperidol intramuscular. The assessed outcomes were rate of restraint and violent behavior. Olanzapine was found significantly more effective in reducing the need for restraint compared to zuclopenthixol acetate. No significant differences were found between haloperidol and the other two with regard to restraint. Neither were other significant differences found between the groups with regard to violent or self-harming behaviors. No significant differences were found in the rate of violent behavior and antipsychotic dosage at discharge. In conclusion, in inpatients with acute agitated psychosis, olanzapine intramuscular shows better efficacy in reducing the need for restraint, at least as compared to zuclopenthixol acetate intramuscular.

    Topics: Antipsychotic Agents; Benzodiazepines; Clopenthixol; Haloperidol; Humans; Injections, Intramuscular; Olanzapine; Psychomotor Agitation; Psychotic Disorders

2022
Local-global processing in early-onset schizophrenia: evidence for an impairment in shifting the spatial scale of attention.
    Brain and cognition, 2003, Volume: 51, Issue:1

    In this study we report the results of two experiments on visual attention conducted with patients with early-onset schizophrenia. These experiments investigated the effect of irrelevant spatial-scale information upon the processing of relevant spatial-scale information, and the ability to shift the spatial scale of attention, across consecutive trials, between different levels of the hierarchical stimulus. Twelve patients with early-onset schizophrenia and matched controls performed local-global tasks under: (1) directed attention conditions with a consistency manipulation and (2) divided-attention conditions. In the directed-attention paradigm, the early-onset patients exhibited the normal patterns of global advantage and interference, and were not unduly affected by the consistency manipulation. Under divided-attention conditions, however, the early-onset patients exhibited a local-processing deficit. The source of this local processing deficit lay in the prolonged reaction time to local targets, when these had been preceded by a global target, but not when preceded by a local target. These findings suggest an impaired ability to shift the spatial scale of attention from a global to a local spatial scale in early-onset schizophrenia.

    Topics: Adolescent; Affect; Antipsychotic Agents; Attention; Benzodiazepines; Clopenthixol; Diazepam; Female; Flupenthixol; Frontal Lobe; Humans; Male; Olanzapine; Parietal Lobe; Perceptual Disorders; Pirenzepine; Reaction Time; Risperidone; Schizophrenia; Space Perception; Time Factors

2003