Reznik I, Benatov R, Sirota P
Dept. 6A, Abarbanel Mental Health Center, Bat Yam.
Harefuah. 1996 May 15;130(10):675-7, 727.
Refractoriness to treatment is a common problem in management of schizophrenics. Conventional pharmacotherapy is usually effective in controlling positive symptoms of the disease, such as delusions and hallucinations. However, they have restricted ability to affect negative symptoms (flat affect, social withdrawal) and to reverse functional disability and behavioral deviance. Furthermore, typical neuroleptics produce adverse effects, such as extrapyramidal symptoms and tardive dyskinesia. A new generation of antipsychotic agents with a low profile of side-effects and good tolerance has recently been developed and actively investigated. Seroquel (ICI 204-636), a dibenzoth azepine derivative, is a novel, putative, potential, atypical neuroleptic; it is a combined dopamine/ serotonin receptor antagonist. We report a 54-year-old man suffering from chronic therapy-resistant schizophrenia, with both positive and negative symptoms, who was successfully treated with Seroquel during 1 year.