Antipsychotics linked to weight gain
30 October 2009
Young patients treated with antipsychotic medicines should be given twice-yearly metabolic health checks, US researchers have suggested.
The researchers found that second-generation antipsychotic medicines were associated with weight gain and metabolic changes in patients taking the medicines for the first time.
Their study followed 338 patients aged 4-17 years. After 10 weeks of treatment, patients had gained an average of 4.4kg to 8.5kg. Some treatments were also associated with increases in patients' cholesterol levels.
The researchers said findings point to the need to monitor patients' risk factors carefully.
'Guidelines for antipsychotic medication exposure for vulnerable paediatric and adolescent patients naive to antipsychotic medication should consider more frequent cardiometabolic monitoring after the first three months of treatment,' they said.
The researchers also stressed the need to consider other potential treatments and provide proactive adverse effect monitoring and management.
Additional Information

Latest jobs Jobs web feed
- Salaried/Lead GPs Malling Health Competitive, role dependant, NHS Pension and defence fees reimbursed, Nationwide
- Salaried GP The Practice plc £75-85k FTE +NHS pension, Ely or Leicester
- Regional Clinical Leads The Practice plc Salary £95-105k FTE + NHS pension, Leicester or Sheffield
- Salaried GP St Peter's Hill Surgery Competitive, Grantham, Lincolnshire
- GP Locum - Cambridgeshire - March, Kings Lynn, Peterborough Agenda Medical Locums up to £650.00 per day, March, Cambridgeshire, South East England
- Salaried Single Handed GP, Kent, 8-9 Sessions per week + PDP, up to £90k + NHS Pension + MDU + PDP Global Medics Permanent UK Salary up to £90k for up to 9 sessions + NHS Pension + MDU + PDP, South East England, Kent
Most read
- Health secretary says GPs have 'ethical duty' to save NHS costs
- NHS Commissioning Board chairman rebuked for 'golf-playing GPs' jibe
- Government department sessions (where BMA 'Treasury rate' is accepted)
- GPs face 'outcomes targets overload', patient group warns
- DH could face legal challenge over risk register veto
- NICE to develop multimorbidity guidelines for GPs
Most commented
MIMS Drug Search
Possible searches include drugs (by brand, generic ingredient or drug class), diseases and more.







