What medication does doctors prescribe for schizophrenic or paranoid thoughts?!


Question: What medication does doctors prescribe for schizophrenic or paranoid thoughts!?
Answers:
How is schizophrenia treated!?

Because the causes of schizophrenia are still unknown, current treatments focus on eliminating the symptoms of the disease!.


Antipsychotic medications

Antipsychotic medications have been available since the mid-1950s!. They effectively alleviate the positive symptoms of schizophrenia!. While these drugs have greatly improved the lives of many patients, they do not cure schizophrenia!.

Everyone responds differently to antipsychotic medication!. Sometimes several different drugs must be tried before the right one is found!. People with schizophrenia should work in partnership with their doctors to find the medications that control their symptoms best with the fewest side effects!.

The older antipsychotic medications include chlorpromazine (Thorazine?), haloperidol (Haldol?), perphenazine (Etrafon?, Trilafon?), and fluphenazine (Prolixin?)!. The older medications can cause extrapyramidal side effects, such as rigidity, persistent muscle spasms, tremors, and restlessness!.

In the 1990s, new drugs, called atypical antipsychotics, were developed that rarely produced these side effects!. The first of these new drugs was clozapine (Clozaril?)!. It treats psychotic symptoms effectively even in people who do not respond to other medications, but it can produce a serious problem called agranulocytosis, a loss of the white blood cells that fight infection!. Therefore, patients who take clozapine must have their white blood cell counts monitored every week or two!. The inconvenience and cost of both the blood tests and the medication itself has made treatment with clozapine difficult for many people, but it is the drug of choice for those whose symptoms do not respond to the other antipsychotic medications, old or new!.

Some of the drugs that were developed after clozapine was introduced-such as risperidone (Risperdal?), olanzapine (Zyprexa?), quetiapine (Seroquel?), sertindole (Serdolect?), and ziprasidone (Geodon?)-are effective and rarely produce extrapyramidal symptoms and do not cause agranulocytosis; but they can cause weight gain and metabolic changes associated with an increased risk of diabetes and high cholesterol!.
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anti psychotics, but keep in mind schizophrenia is not a real condition but something left over after all other conditions are ruled out!. psychology is too new to understand anything at all, is not a real science by definition, and the medicines prescribed on its behalf have more side effects than any other medications out there!.Www@Answer-Health@Com





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