Adler L A, Angrist B, Weinreb H, Rotrosen J
Psychiatry Service, New York Department of Veterans Affairs Medical Center, NY 10010.
Psychopharmacol Bull. 1991;27(2):107-11.
This investigation reports pilot data on two points originally raised in the earliest reports of the efficacy of beta-blockers in akathisia: their potential utility in the akathisia of idiopathic Parkinson's disease and the possibility of determining a central vs. a peripheral site of action by comparing the time course of the effects of lipophilic and hydrophilic agents. Akathisia improved in 4 patients with idiopathic Parkinson's disease after low dose propranolol treatment. Six patients with neuroleptic-induced akathisia were treated with the hydrophilic beta-blocker nadolol. Effects on akathisia occurred, but evolved much more slowly than after treatment with lipophilic agents, such as propranolol and metoprolol, thus suggesting a central site of action.