The Effects of Nicotine Withdrawal on Reward Responsivity in Schizophrenia
SchizophreniaSchizoaffective DisorderIt has been suggested that patients with schizophrenia smoke in order to produce amelioration of dysfunctional dopaminergic pathways allowing them to experience pleasure and satisfaction and overcome anhedonia. No studies have assessed the effects of nicotine withdrawal on reward responsivity in patients with schizophrenia. The investigators believe that an understanding of this is crucial if improved treatments for nicotine dependence are to be developed for this patient population. If this group already has deficits in reward responsivity as a symptom of the disease then they may be particularly prone to the effects of nicotine withdrawal on reward systems. Smoking cessation may lead to a further decrease in their responsivity to pleasurable stimuli and worsening anhedonia. Treatments for smoking cessation may need to ameliorate any increased deficits if they are likely to be effective in patients with schizophrenia.
Glucose and Lipid Metabolism on Antipsychotic Medication
SchizophreniaSchizoaffective Disorder2 moreThis project aims to a) evaluate the effects of selected antipsychotic medications on insulin action in skeletal muscle (glucose disposal), liver (glucose production) and adipose tissue (whole-body lipolysis), b) evaluate the effects of selected antipsychotic medications on abdominal adipose tissue mass, total body fat and total fat-free mass, and c) explore the longitudinal effects of treatment with selected antipsychotics on glucose tolerance, lipid profiles, abdominal adipose tissue mass, total body fat and total fat-free mass. These hypotheses will be evaluated by measuring 1) whole-body glucose and lipid kinetics with the use of "gold-standard" stable isotope tracer methodology, 2) body composition using dual energy x-ray absorptiometry and magnetic resonance imaging, and 3) longitudinal changes in glucose tolerance and lipid profiles. The aims will be addressed in non-diabetic schizophrenia patients chronically treated with risperidone, olanzapine, clozapine, quetiapine, ziprasidone, or haloperidol, and untreated healthy controls. Re-evaluations will also be performed in patients who are randomized to switch from their current antipsychotic (from the above groups) to risperidone, olanzapine, quetiapine, or ziprasidone for 6 months. Relevant data is critically needed to target basic research, identify long-term cardiovascular consequences, and plan therapeutic interventions.
Enhancing Motivation To Quit Smoking In Smokers With Serious Mental Illness
SchizophreniaSchizoaffective DisorderThis project will assess the utility of a brief motivational intervention to engage smokers with schizophrenia in treatment for tobacco dependence treatment. It is hypothesized that a brief motivational intervention will be more effective in engaging smokers with schizophrenia to tobacco dependence treatment than an educational intervention. The educational intervention will increase the likelihood to reducing cigarette intake and/or attending tobacco dependence treatment by teaching subjects about the negative effects of smoking and the success of tobacco dependence treatment. The motivational intervention will increase the likelihood to reducing cigarette intake and/or attending tobacco dependence treatment by increasing subjects' motivation to change by presenting objective and personalized information regarding their smoking behaviors in a non-judgmental and supportive manner.
An International Extension Study of Corlux for Recurrent Psychotic Symptoms in Psychotic Major Depression...
Major Depressive DisorderPsychotic DisordersCorlux (mifepristone) is a new medication that modulates the body's use of a hormone called cortisol. Under normal conditions, cortisol and other hormones are created by the body in response to physical and emotional stress, triggering a healthy stress response. People who suffer from psychotic major depression may have unusually high levels of cortisol circulating within them or abnormal patterns of cortisol levels, overloading the stress response mechanism and causing symptoms of psychosis such as delusional thoughts or hallucinations. If Corlux can keep the body's cortisol receptors from being overloaded, the stress response system may return to normal function, which may result in improvement of symptoms. The purpose of this study is to allow patients who have already participated in an earlier 8 week study of Corlux versus placebo (an inactive pill) to receive additional courses of treatment with Corlux periodically if a psychotic episode should reappear during a period of one year.
Effect And Safety Of Ziprasidone Compared To Other Atypical Antipsychotic Drug In Schizophrenic...
SchizophreniaSchizoaffective Disorder1 moreEvaluation of the antipsychotic efficacy and safety of ziprasidone versus olanzapine, risperidone or quetiapine in patients with schizophrenia, schizoaffective and schizophreniform disorders under naturalistic conditions of clinical practice
Pharmacokinetic Characterization of Intramuscular Olanzapine Depot
SchizophreniaSchizoaffective DisorderThe goals of this study are to: Determine the blood levels of intramuscular (IM) olanzapine depot in patients at different points in time after an injection, and compare these levels to the amount of olanzapine in the blood of patients after treated by oral administration with Zyprexa (olanzapine) tablets or by intramuscular administration with Zyprexa IntraMuscular (olanzapine for injection).
Treatment of Hallucinosis/Psychosis in Parkinson's Disease by an Investigational Drug
HallucinationsPsychoses1 moreThe primary objective is to demonstrate that the investigational new drug, ACP-103, is well tolerated by, and will not worsen parkinsonism in, patients with Parkinson's disease and psychosis. The secondary objectives are to determine whether ACP-103 will ameliorate psychosis in patients with Parkinson's disease and whether ACP-103 is safe in Parkinson's disease patients taking multiple anti-parkinsonian medications.
A Study of Risperidone in Combination With Lorazepam Compared With Standard Therapy for Emergency...
SchizophreniaPsychotic Disorders1 moreThe purpose of the study is to show that risperidone (an antipsychotic medication) combined with lorazepam (an anti-anxiety medication) is more effective than conventional therapy administered by intramuscular injection for emergency treatment of patients with schizophrenia.
A Comparison of the Effectiveness and Safety of Injectable Risperidone With That of Risperidone...
SchizophreniaPsychotic DisordersThe primary purpose of the study is to show that treatment with an injectable formulation of risperidone is not less effective than and has a similar safety profile to risperidone tablets in patients with chronic schizophrenia.
A Trial Comparing Risperidone Long-Acting Injection With Oral Antipsychotic in the Treatment of...
SchizophreniaSchizoaffective Disorder2 moreThe purpose of this study is to evaluate the effectiveness, safety and tolerability of risperidone long-acting injection (LAI) versus oral antipsychotics in participants with recent onset psychosis (abnormal thinking and/or hallucinations).