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3H]RX 821002 in human dorsolateral prefrontal cortex: no changes in postmortem tissue from subjects with schizophrenia
Authors:Dean Brian
Affiliation:Rebecca L. Cooper Research Laboratories, Mental Health Research Institute of Victoria, Victoria, Parkville, Australia. bdean@mhri.edu.au
Abstract:One of the major differences between the atypical antipsychotic drugs clozapine and olanzapine is that clozapine has a two-fold higher affinity for the alpha(2)-adrenoreceptors. As clozapine can have therapeutic benefits in individuals that do not respond to other antipsychotic drugs, this raises the possibility that changes in the alpha(2)-adrenoreceptors could be a marker for a predisposition to treatment resistance. A methodology has been optimised to measure the binding of [3H]RX 821002 to alpha(2)-adrenoreceptors in human postmortem CNS and has shown that these receptors are not altered in Brodmann's area 9 from subjects with schizophrenia. These data add to those of one other study that showed the alpha(2)-adrenoreceptors were not altered in Brodmann's area 10 and the hippocampus from subjects with schizophrenia, and do not support the hypothesis that changes in alpha(2)-adrenoreceptors are a marker for treatment resistance in schizophrenia.
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