Publication | Open Access
A controlled comparison of flupenthixol and amitriptyline in depressed outpatients.
74
Citations
8
References
1976
Year
Psychotropic MedicationPsychopharmacologyPharmacotherapyMental HealthSocial SciencesMood SymptomAddiction MedicineControlled ComparisonPsychoactive DrugPsychiatryDepressionNeuropharmacologyClinical PsychiatryPharmacologyFlexible DosageSide EffectLow DosageDepressed OutpatientsMood DisordersDrug TherapyMedicinePsychopathologyPharmacoepidemiology
Sixty depressed outpatients were allocated to treatment with either amitriptyline (75-225 mg/day) or flupenthixol (1-5-4-5 mg/day) in flexible dosage for six weeks under double-blind procedures. Various objective and subjective assessments were carried out before and after one, three, and six weeks of treatment. Twenty-three patients completed the course of amitriptyline and 28 the course of flupenthixol. Almost all variables improved significantly over time, irrespective of drug. On most ratings there were no significant differences between the two drugs, but the trends favoured flupenthixol. In particular, flupenthixol lessened anxiety scores more than amitriptyline. Unwanted effects were few and not troublesome except in two patients receiving amitriptyline. Flupenthixol, in low dosage, is a useful alternative antidepressant for depressed outpatients.
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