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International Psychogeriatrics (2000), 12: 527-536 Cambridge University Press
Copyright © 2000 International Psychogeriatric Association
doi:10.1017/S1041610200006633
Published online by Cambridge University Press 10 Jan 2005


Articles

Risperidone in the Treatment of Patients With Alzheimer's Disease With Negative Symptoms


Arnaldo E. Negrón a1a2 and William E. Reichman a1
a1 Division of Geriatric Psychiatry, Department of Psychiatry, Robert Wood Johnson Medical School-University of Medicine and Dentistry of New Jersey, Piscataway, New Jersey, USA
a2 New Jersey Veterans Affairs Health-Care System, Lyons, New Jersey, USA.

Article author query
negrón a   [PubMed] [Google Scholar
reichman w   [PubMed] [Google Scholar

Abstract

Introduction: Negative symptoms such as diminished initiative, drive, motivation, and emotional reactivity have been described in patients with Alzheimer's disease (AD). The purpose of this study was to retrospectively analyze the efficacy and tolerability of risperidone for the treatment of clinically significant positive and negative symptoms in AD. Methods: We reviewed the charts of 50 community-residing AD patients who had been treated in a specialized university-based dementia management clinic. Clinical data comparing baseline and 12 weeks of treatment were obtained by reviewing a series of rating scales that were recorded as part of a comprehensive behavioral assessment. Results: Reviewed subjects had a mean age of 79.7±6 years and a mean of 12±3.6 years of school. Seventy percent of the subjects were female and the majority was White. The mean dose of risperidone prescribed was 1.3±0.6 mg per day (range from 0.5 mg to 3.0 mg). After 12 weeks of treatment, the severity of positive and negative symptoms was significantly reduced. Importantly, improvement in negative symptoms with the use of risperidone appeared to be independent of a positive treatment effect on positive symptoms. Risperidone had insignificant effects on both cognitive status and the emergence of extrapyramidal symptoms. Conclusion: This retrospective study demonstrates that risperidone appears to be efficacious in the treatment of clinically significant positive and negative symptoms in patients with AD.

(Received December 4 1999)
(Accepted April 13 2000)



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