This drug for mental health may harm the brain

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In a recent study published in JAMA Psychiatry, researchers found that a commonly used antipsychotic medication is linked to adverse changes in brain structure.

They suggest that the adverse changes in brain structure are an important consideration for prescribing for psychiatric conditions where alternatives are possible.

This study is the first in humans to show the effects of this type of medication on the brain.

The research is from the University of Toronto. One author is Dr. Aristotle Voineskos.

Until the 1990s, antipsychotic medications were primarily given to people with schizophrenia.

But since then their use has expanded to major depression and a range of pediatric, adult, and geriatric disorders, including anxiety, insomnia, and autism, for which one in five patients are prescribed anti-psychotics.

Because it is believed that antipsychotics protect against the harmful effects of untreated psychosis in the brain, they remain the foundation of treatment for schizophrenia.

In the study, the team tested patients with major depression who also experience psychosis who were prescribed antipsychotic medications olanzapine and sertraline for 12 to 20 weeks.

For those who went into remission, one group continued with both medications and the other was given a placebo instead of olanzapine.

Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI) scans were taken before and after the placebo was introduced.

The researchers found evidence that the use of olanzapine was linked to adverse changes in brain structure, namely a thinning of the cortex.

These changes were even more prominent in elderly study participants.

But participants who experienced a relapse of psychotic symptoms also had potentially adverse changes in brain structure, emphasizing the essential role antipsychotics play in treating disorders where psychosis is present.

The researchers say that when psychosis is present, the life-threatening effects of untreated illness outweigh any adverse effects on brain structure.

But given that half the patients in the study sustained remission after switching from olanzapine to placebo, future studies could find which patients need long-term antipsychotic treatment and which patients can safely discontinue.

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