Posted by Lamdage22 on March 23, 2020, at 13:45:50
In reply to Re: AP's and relief, posted by undopaminergic on March 23, 2020, at 12:18:45
I have not tried any of these with the exeption of lurasidon. Tiapride sounds really cool. I will look into it. Thanks!
> Have you considered amisulpride (or sulpiride; maybe tiapride), lurasidone, blonanserin, sertindole, or cariprazine?
>
> The "old-style" APs also cause less weight gain, although they are more likely to provoke the antipyramidal side effects. Some examples of typicals with low histamine H1-affinity are haloperidol, thiothixene, perphenazine, trifluoperazine, and fluphenazine. At least some of these, such as haloperidol, are very effective APs.
>
> My psychiatrist thinks Seroquel is a poor antipsychotic. A nurse I've spoken with is of a similar opinion. It is also *very* antihistaminic -- only clozapine has a higher histamine H1 affinity relative to dopamine D2.
>
> What all APs have in common is the D2-antagonism. Clozapine is the mildest at the D2, yet it is regarded as the most effective. It is the preferred AP for psychosis in Parkinson's disease.
>
> -undopaminergic
>
Seroquel 900mg :(
Zyprexa 25mg :(
Trazodone 100mg
Venlafaxine 37.5mg
Metformin 2000mg
Lithium 250mg
5000 IU Vitamin D3
Blueberries!!!
Orthomolecular
poster:Lamdage22
thread:1109162
URL: http://www.dr-bob.org/babble/20200303/msgs/1109181.html