Expert review of neurotherapeutics
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Expert Rev Neurother · Jul 2007
ReviewRegulation of adult hippocampal neurogenesis: relevance to depression.
Recent hypotheses suggest that depression may involve an inability to mount adaptive structural changes in key neuronal networks. In particular, the addition of new neurons within the hippocampus, a limbic region implicated in mood disorders, is compromised in animal models of depression. ⋯ While there remains substantial debate about the precise relevance of hippocampal neurogenesis to mood disorders, this provocative hypothesis has been the focus of many recent studies. In this review, we discuss the pathways that may mediate the effects of depression models and antidepressants on adult hippocampal neurogenesis, and the promise of these studies in the development of novel antidepressants.
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Expert Rev Neurother · Jul 2007
ReviewPregabalin for the treatment of generalized anxiety disorder: a novel pharmacologic intervention.
Pregabalin is the first anxiolytic pharmacologic alternative for the treatment of generalized anxiety disorder (GAD) to be introduced in more than 10 years. GAD is a significant psychiatric condition with lifetime prevalence rates ranging between 5.7 and 6.4%. It causes significant impairment in quality of life and functional abilities equivalent to those associated with major depression. ⋯ Pregabalin has minimal potential for drug-drug interactions and does not provoke a clinically significant withdrawal response. Furthermore, pregabalin has low potential for abuse and dependence, unlike other classes of medications used for the treatment of GAD. Clinicians may consider the use of pregabalin in lieu of benzodiazepines as an alternative therapy for their patients with GAD.
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Expert Rev Neurother · Jul 2007
Comparative StudyThrombolysis with alteplase for acute ischemic stroke: review of SITS-MOST and other Phase IV studies.
Thrombolytic therapy is the only approved therapy for acute ischemic stroke patients. As part of the European approval process, the Safe Implementation of Thrombolysis in Stroke - Monitoring Study (SITS-MOST) was demanded as a Phase IV study to evaluate the safety and efficacy of alteplase in a 3-h time-window. This article summarizes SITS-MOST and compares it with other Phase IV studies. ⋯ The results of SITS-MOST are comparable with the results of the randomized placebo-controlled trials and other Phase IV studies such as standard treatment with Alteplase to Reverse Stroke and Canadian Alteplase for Stroke Effectiveness Study. They confirm that intravenous alteplase is safe and effective in routine clinical practice when used for acute stroke within 3 h of stroke onset, even in centers with little previous experience of thrombolytic therapy but only if the licensing approval criteria are strictly followed. These findings should encourage wider use of thrombolytic therapies for suitable stroke patients treated in stroke centers.