Aripiprazole in patients with bipolar mania and beyond: an update of practical guidance
Article 2011 en
Authors
GG
Guy M. Goodwin
MA
Mocrane Abbar
TS
Thomas E. Schläepfer
Abstract
1 min read
Clinical practice guidelines widely recommend aripiprazole as a first-line treatment for mania. Although clinical trials may not represent all patient subpopulations, they show that aripiprazole is well tolerated and has a long-term stabilizing potential. The successful use of aripiprazole rests on using the appropriate initial dose, titrating and adjusting the dose as needed and using appropriate concomitant medication to minimize any short-term adverse events. Low incidence of sedation makes aripiprazole a reasonable long-term treatment choice. If short-term sedation is required an adjunctive sedative agent can be added and removed when no longer needed. Clinical considerations should influence treatment choice, and a better distinction between sedation and antimanic effects should be an educational target aimed to overcome potential barriers for using non-sedative antimanic agents such as aripiprazole.
Eduard Vieta, Michel Bourin, Raymond Sanchez, Ronald N. Marcus, Elyse Stock, Robert D. McQuade, William H. Carson, Neveen Abou-Gharbia, René Swanink, Taro Iwamoto
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