Author:
Malka R.,Lôo H.,Ganry H.,Souche A.,Marey C.,Kamoun A.
Abstract
Alcohol interferes with the central metabolism of the catecholamines and especially with indolamines (5-HT). Thus, the use of an antidepressant such as tianeptine, whose main neurochemical effect is to increase the reuptake of 5-HT, seems to be particularly indicated for the continued treatment of depressed patients after alcohol withdrawal. This study evaluated the therapeutic efficacy and acceptability during long-term administration of tianeptine in depressed patients (major depressive episode or dysthymic disorder) in a multicentre trial, after withdrawal from alcohol abuse or dependence. The results relate to 130 depressed patients, who abstained from alcohol and received treatment for a year. Only one patient dropped-out because of side-effects, and medication was interrupted in 5% of subjects because of alcoholic relapses. Prescribed in the long term, tianeptine did not produce orthostatic hypotension, changes in bodyweight, or alterations in the ECG. All changes found in haematological and biochemical investigations suggested an improvement in patients' physical state. This, and other studies, indicate that tianeptine appears to have the potential to be a safe antidepressant, which might be particularly useful in those patients who are susceptible to the side-effects of psychotropic drugs.
Publisher
Royal College of Psychiatrists
Subject
Psychiatry and Mental health
Reference40 articles.
1. Role of drug therapies in the treatment of alcoholism: alcohol and anxiety – alcohol and depression;Malka;Clinical Neuropharmacology,1988
2. Stimulation of serotonin uptake induced by a new antidepressant. (Proceeding of the ECNP constitutent meeting, Brussels);Renaud;Pharmacopsychiatry,1988
3. THE ASSESSMENT OF ANXIETY STATES BY RATING
4. Efficacy of Tianeptine in Anxious-Depressed Patients: Results of a Controlled Multicenter Trial versus Amitriptyline
Cited by
28 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献