QEEG alpha 1 changes after a single dose of high-potency neuroleptics as a predictor of short-term response to treatment in schizophrenic patients
- PMID: 8018782
- DOI: 10.1016/0006-3223(94)90002-7
QEEG alpha 1 changes after a single dose of high-potency neuroleptics as a predictor of short-term response to treatment in schizophrenic patients
Abstract
Baseline quantitative electroencephalographic (QEEG) characteristics and their changes after a single test dose of either haloperidol or clopenthixol were investigated in a group of 29 schizophrenics as possible predictors of short-term response to those drugs. On baseline QEEG assessment, responders (R) to subsequent treatment showed fewer slow and more fast activities than nonresponders (NR). A large overlap between R and NR with respect to these measures was observed, however, revealing their practical inadequacy to predict short-term response in individual patients. On the contrary, changes in alpha 1, observed 6 hr after the administration of a single test dose of either haloperidol or clopenthixol, discriminated to a very large extent between R and NR, correctly identifying 17 out of 18 R and 8 out of 10 NR. The QEEG test dose procedure might be used in the selection of the most appropriate antipsychotic drug for individual schizophrenic patients.
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