A twelve month comparison of penfluridol and trifluoperazine in chronic schizophrenic outpatients.
This investigation is a 52-week double-blind study comparing the efficacy and safety of penfluridol and trifluoperazine in 25 chronic schizophrenic outpatients. Penfluridol was administered once weekly and trifluoperazine daily. Measurements were made at baseline, various fixed intervals during the study period and termination. The data reveals that both agents were similarly effective in maintaining control of the symptoms of chronic schizophrenic patients at a level commensurate with or better than that provided by their previous medication. Besides being effective, medications were also well tolerated. The side effects were characteristic of marketed neuroleptics. Akathisia was more common with penfluridol but readily controlled with anti-parkinsonian medication. Other side effects were similar in severity and occurrence between study-drug groups. Both agents had low autonomic liability, and neither agent was depressogenic.[1]References
- A twelve month comparison of penfluridol and trifluoperazine in chronic schizophrenic outpatients. Donlon, P.T., Meyer, J.E. The Journal of clinical psychiatry. (1978) [Pubmed]
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