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Research Article

Several prescription patterns of antipsychotic drugs influence cognitive functions in Japanese chronic schizophrenia patients

, , , , , & show all
Pages 138-142 | Received 21 Jun 2011, Accepted 26 Sep 2011, Published online: 05 Dec 2011
 

Abstract

Objective. We hypothesized that an excessive dose of antipsychotic drug and/or a larger number of antipsychotic drug worsens cognitive functions in schizophrenia patients. To confirm the hypothesis, we compared several cognitive functions in the patients taking a second-generation antipsychotic drug (SGA) only (SGA monotherapy group) with those in patients taking more than two kinds of antipsychotic drugs (polypharmacy group). Methods. The cognitive functions of 136 chronic schizophrenia patients were evaluated using the Brief Assessment of Cognition in Schizophrenia, Japanese-language version (BACS-J). Results. A significantly negative correlation was found between the composite score in the BACS-J and the chlorpromazine equivalence of doses of antipsychotic drugs in whole patients (r = –0.43, P < 0.001). Schizophrenia patients in the polypharmacy group had lower composite scores than those in the SGA monotherapy group in the BACS-J. No difference was observed in the composite score and the primary score in each item in the BACS-J between patients with first- plus second-generation antipsychotic drug (FGA + SGA group) and those with two kinds of SGA (SGA + SGA group). Conclusion. These results suggest that an excessive dose of antipsychotic drugs regardless of FGA and SGA might cause the deterioration of cognitive functions in chronic Japanese schizophrenia patients.

Acknowledgement

None.

Statement of Interest

All authors declare that they have no conflicts of interest.

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