Clozapine as a drug of dependence
Authors
1Psychology Department, Eleanor Rathbone Building, Bedford Street, Liverpool University, Liverpool L69 7ZA, UK e-mail: ajg@liverpool.ac.uk, Fax: +44-151-794-2945
Abstract
Rationale: In schizophrenics, clozapine has been reported to induce various withdrawal signs and rapid onset relapse to psychosis on cessation of chronic treatment. Objective: The study was designed to develop an animal model of one aspect of clozapine tolerance and withdrawal using core body temperature measures. Methods: Two groups of 15 female Wistar rats were treated chronically (b.i.d.) with clozapine at 6 or 12tmg/kg per injection for 21 days prior to cessation of drug treatment, withdrawal being studied over 4 consecutive days. Body temperatures were assessed daily throughout the study. Results: Acutely, clozapine induced dose-related hypothermia, to which complete tolerance developed in both groups, the development of tolerance being more rapid in the group treated with 6tmg/kg per injection of clozapine. During withdrawal only the group treated chronically with 12tmg/kg per injection of clozapine showed rapid onset significant hyperthermia. This dissipated progressively over days, and was completely absent after 4 days of withdrawal. Conclusions: Clozapine induced a clear somatic withdrawal sign after chronic treatment. It is suggested that, in future research in both humans and animals, it is important to attempt to differentiate between clozapine withdrawal and clozapine withdrawal-induced relapse to psychosis. It is also important to characterise the clozapine withdrawal syndrome fully in animals; to establish the neurochemical mechanisms involved in such withdrawal; and to determine which novel antipsychotics are most efficacious in inducing clozapine-like withdrawal effects, in suppressing clozapine withdrawal, and in preventing relapse to psychosis in patients being transferred from clozapine to novel atypical antipsychotic drugs.
Keywords
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Clozapine as a drug of dependence
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