Publication | Closed Access
Clinical and Theoretical Implications of 5-HT<sub>2</sub> and D<sub>2</sub> Receptor Occupancy of Clozapine, Risperidone, and Olanzapine in Schizophrenia
710
Citations
43
References
1999
Year
Clozapine, at doses known to be effective in routine clinical settings, showed a D2 occupancy clearly lower than that of typical antipsychotics, while risperidone and olanzapine at their usual clinical doses gave the same level of D2 occupancy as low-dose typical antipsychotics. The results also suggest that some previous clinical comparisons of antipsychotics may have been confounded by different levels of D2 occupancy. Clinical comparisons of these drugs, matching for D2 occupancy, may provide a better measure of their true "atypicality" and will help in understanding the contribution of non-D2 receptors to antipsychotic effects.
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