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2.
Acta Psychiatr Belg ; 95(6): 337-49, 1995.
Article in French | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-8669305

ABSTRACT

Deontology draws one's inspiration from Ethics. From this occurrence it seems important to avoid confusion between the first and the second. Psychiatry belongs truly to medical training. Nevertheless considering freedom pathology is its main particularity. This is the reason why human freedom must, at all cost, be preserved. This one is essential whenever individual subjectivity is concerned. The fundamental reference remains Human Rights Convention; even if opposed to principle of reality, one is necessarily obliged to a conflictual accommodation.


Subject(s)
Ethics, Institutional , Ethics, Medical , Hospitals, Psychiatric , Freedom , Human Rights , Humans , Mental Disorders/therapy
5.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-3063534

ABSTRACT

Unlike conventional antidepressants, rolipram (a new approach in the treatment of depression) stimulates both the presynaptic and the postsynaptic component of monoaminergic transmission. Several double blind trials are under way to assess the clinical efficacy and safety of this compound. The present study was a randomized, 4-week interindividual double blind double-dummy comparison with desipramine in inpatients with major (DSM-III) and/or endogenous (ICD-9) depressions. After a minimum washout period of three days the patients received either 0.50 mg rolipram or 25 mg desipramine orally t.i.d. for the first three days, then 0.75 mg rolipram or 50 mg desipramine t.i.d. until day 28. Rating tests were based principally on the AMDP-system and the HAMD scale. The study showed no differences between the two drugs as regards the efficacy, but a definite trend in favour of rolipram as regards the side effects and, in particular, anticholinergic effects.


Subject(s)
Depressive Disorder/drug therapy , Desipramine/therapeutic use , Phosphodiesterase Inhibitors/therapeutic use , Pyrrolidinones/therapeutic use , Adolescent , Adult , Aged , Clinical Trials as Topic , Depressive Disorder/psychology , Double-Blind Method , Humans , Middle Aged , Psychological Tests , Psychometrics , Random Allocation , Rolipram
6.
Acta Psychiatr Belg ; 87(2): 230-5, 1987.
Article in French | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-3618273

ABSTRACT

Rolipram facilitates the postsynaptic neurotransmission of NA through a completely new mechanism of action, namely, an inhibition of the inactivation of the second messenger (the cyclic AMP) by phosphodiesterase. In the present study, Rolipram is compared to a classical tricyclic antidepressant which facilitates the NA transmission through an inhibition of its presynaptic reuptake: Desipramine. Preliminary results on 12 Rolipram patients vs. 9 Desipramine patients indicate that Rolipram has an antidepressant potency comparable to Desipramine with less anticholinergic and hypotensive side effects. This study also illustrates that a 14-factor AMDP profile gives much more information than a single total score such as the Hamilton score.


Subject(s)
Antidepressive Agents/therapeutic use , Depressive Disorder/drug therapy , Desipramine/therapeutic use , Pyrrolidinones/therapeutic use , Adolescent , Adult , Aged , Chemical Phenomena , Chemistry , Double-Blind Method , Female , Humans , Male , Middle Aged , Phosphodiesterase Inhibitors/therapeutic use , Rolipram
7.
Acta Psychiatr Belg ; 85(5): 644-61, 1985.
Article in French | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-4091024

ABSTRACT

In order to develop practical criteria to guide in the selection of antidepressant medication according to depressive symptomatology, we propose a graphical representation of the clinical activity of 24 antidepressants according to a "star" model. Six parameters have been evaluated from 0 to 5 in comparison to reference drugs (rated 5) by 11 independent "blind" psychiatrists expert in pharmacotherapy. Three parameters were used as measures of therapeutic activity: antidepressant, psychostimulant, and anxiolytic, with iproniazide 75 mg/d, metamphetamine 15 mg/d, and diazepam 20 mg/d as reference drugs respectively. Three additional parameters assessed the level of side-effects: anticholinergic, sedative, and hypotensive, with atropine 0.75 mg/d, phenobarbital 200 mg/d, and iproniazide 75 mg/d as reference drugs respectively. The defined dose represented the standard maintenance daily dose for depressive outpatients. Mean values for each parameter, rounded off to the closest number, were used for the graphical representation. Results showed an excellent agreement among evaluators for the clinical profile of classical tricyclic and MAOI antidepressants, but serious divergences for the more recent drugs (e.g., viloxazine and mianserine), possibly reflecting more atypical or more variable clinical profile of these compounds.


Subject(s)
Antidepressive Agents/classification , Depressive Disorder/drug therapy , Antidepressive Agents/pharmacology , Antidepressive Agents/therapeutic use , Humans
8.
Acta Psychiatr Belg ; 84(5): 425-38, 1984.
Article in French | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-6395635

ABSTRACT

Man can sometimes be the subject of experiment in medicine; in psychiatry, there are at least two situations when men, more so, a patient occupies legitimate the function of "experimental object". First the problem of clinical psychopharmacology is considered showing its necessity and legitimacy; one emphasizes the advantages and warrentee that the hospital is providing. Ethical regulations are discussed in relation to this practice and a sterilyzind formalism could be damageable as well as the ambiguity of the notion of informed conscript. The first conclusion is that the notion of therapeutic trial should replace clinical experiment meaning that the patient should be the first winner of this enterprise. Then the second situation of a hospitalized patient being the subject of teaching is discussed. The author describes its teaching technique based on the semiology of talking and the pathology of communication. Once again, its main concern is to render the patient first to benefit from this experimental situation, the remaining coming later.


Subject(s)
Human Experimentation , Mental Disorders/therapy , Patient Advocacy , Psychiatry/education , Clinical Trials as Topic , Ethics, Medical , Humans , Psychotropic Drugs/therapeutic use , Research/standards
13.
Acta Psychiatr Belg ; 78(4): 619-34, 1978.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31063

ABSTRACT

Eighteen inpatients suffering from a severe anxiety received in double-blind and crossover conditions iv and im injections of 10 mg diazepam, 5 mg lorazepam or saline t.i.d. during 5 days. The morning injections was made iv in a CCTV studio. Before injection and 20 mn after it, the patient filled out a 100 mm Visual Analogue Scale; his doctor-in-charge proceeded to a standard interview and to physiological measurements (tremor of hand, patellar reflexes, blood pressure, pulse rate). The videotaped interviews were randomly, i.e. time-blind, rated by two independent observers on 3 scales: the VAS, the Hamilton Anxiety Scale and an ad hoc Verbal and Non-Verbal Anxiety Scale (VNVA). The statistical analysis was completed by a logical analysis according to Lewis Carroll. The results demonstrate the superiority of lorazepam over diazepam on psychic anxiety, somatic anxiety, sleep and blood pressure, the only significant side-effect being drowsiness.


Subject(s)
Anti-Anxiety Agents/therapeutic use , Anxiety Disorders/drug therapy , Diazepam/therapeutic use , Lorazepam/therapeutic use , Videotape Recording , Adult , Aged , Anxiety , Clinical Trials as Topic , Double-Blind Method , Female , Humans , Interview, Psychological , Male , Middle Aged , Placebos , Psychiatric Status Rating Scales , Time Factors
14.
Acta Psychiatr Belg ; 77(6): 661-8, 1977.
Article in French | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-610347

ABSTRACT

Psychopharmacology has confirmed psychiatry as a medical science; methodological rigor of the exact sciences is essential to psychopharmacological research. It does not however question speculative thought which remains one of the strong sources of psychiatry. The identification of new drugs with their elective properties and their unexpected action on psychopathology imposes a reappraisal of psychiatric concepts. This is true for some narrow concepts such as anxiety and anguish, which only exist in the French. The French psychiatry also determined its clinical limits at the beginning of this century, and it seems to lose it from time to time. Like any emotion, the anxious matrix is one non distinguishable from the unity of the existence. A phenomenological approach permits to confirm the intuition of language in showing that the living experience of anguish is different from the one of anxiety.


Subject(s)
Anxiety/psychology , Humans , Psychopharmacology
15.
Rev Med Liege ; 31(4): 130-4, 1976 Feb 15.
Article in French | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-1257659
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