Current Issue
Volume: 121
Number: 3
Index: May 2009
Clinical Focus: Diabetes and Concomitant Disorders
Call For Papers
September 2009
Clinical Focus: ADHD, Vaccinations, and Pediatric Diabetes
  • ADHD:
    • Treating children, adolescents, and adults
    • Pharmacotherapy options
    • Switching medication dosages
    • Treating ADHD in patients with concomitant disorders
    • Clinical trial developments
    • Oppositional defiant disorder
  • Diabetes in children:
    • Type 1 and type 2 diabetes
    • Pen devices
    • DPP-4 inhibitors and investigational drugs
  • Diabetes in active patients and athletes
  • Physical examinations for back-to-school
  • Allergy medications for children and adolescents

Submission deadline: (Standard): July 1
Submission deadline: (Fast-Track): August 17
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Index - Table of Content - Article Abstract
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Weekly Poll
doi: 10.3810/pgm.2008.07.1786
Postgraduate Medicine: Volume 120: No.2
Schizophrenia, Obesity, and Antipsychotic Medications:
What Can We Do?
Leslie Citrome, MD, MPH and Betty Vreeland, MSN, APRN, NP-C, BC
Abstract: Obesity is one of the most common physical health problems among patients with severe and persistent mental illnesses, such as schizophrenia. Multifactorial in origin, obesity can be attributed to an unhealthy lifestyle as well as the effects of psychotropic medications such as second-generation antipsychotics. Excess body weight increases the risk for many medical problems, including type 2 diabetes mellitus, coronary heart disease, osteoarthritis, hypertension, and gallbladder disease. A PubMed search revealed 403 English-language citations to the query "schizophrenia" AND "obesity" and 469 citations to the query "obesity" AND "antipsychotics." The evidence is that different antipsychotics have different propensities for weight gain, and that children, adolescents, and first-episode patients are at higher risk for weight gain associated with antipsychotic treatment. Monitoring body weight early in treatment will help predict those at high risk for substantial weight gain. Switching antipsychotic medication may or may not be clinically feasible, but can lead to a reduction in body weight. Lifestyle therapies and other nonpharmacological interventions have been shown to be effective in controlled clinical trials, but the evidence base for adjunctive medication strategies such as with orlistat, sibutramine, amantadine, nizatidine, metformin, topiramate, and others, is conflicting. At the very least, a "small-steps approach" to managing weight should be offered to all patients who are overweight or obese.

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