Baldessarini R J
Postgrad Med. 1979 Apr;65(4):108-11, 114-9. doi: 10.1080/00325481.1979.11715115.
The antipsychotic drugs have provided effective and relatively safe treatment of schizophrenia, paranoid illnesses, and manic-depressive conditions marked by psychotic features. These agents are sometimes called "neuroleptic," as virtually all produce signs of extrapyramidal neurologic disorders in addition to their antipsychotic actions; in part, evidently, the neuroleptic effects are an artifact of the means of screening of potential new agents. These agents have a strong and selective antagonistic action on synaptic mechanisms in the brain mediated by dopamine as a neurotransmitter. This antidopamine action almost certainly contributes importantly to their parkinsonism effect (basal ganglia) and their prolactin-elevating (hypothalamic) effect; in addition, antipsychotic actions may be mediated by antidopamine effects, possibly in limbic and other forebrain centers.