Atypical antipsychotic

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    Antipsychotic Diseases

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    The antipsychotic medications are recommended as pharmacological interventions to treat psychotic episode in psychosis and schizophrenia (NICE 2014). They may be classified as atypical and typical antipsychotics (Meltzer 2013). The atypical drugs refer to as the newer generation of antipsychotics which may have less extrapyramidal side effects (EPS) compared to the typical antipsychotics, also known as the first generation of antipsychotics (Meltzer 2013). Both types of antipsychotic drugs are

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    One in four adults experience a mental health disorder every year. According to the Health Reference Series, schizophrenia affects 1.1% of the US population and the majority of those who suffer with schizophrenia go untreated or are unaware that they even have the disorder. Approximately 2,200,000 people in the United States suffer from schizophrenia, and they have a lifespan 20% shorter than those who do not have schizophrenia (Fentress, Moller 1). Schizophrenia is a unique mental disorder that

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    Drug class Antipsychotic drugs are the class of medications used to treat psychosis among emotional and mental disorders. Psychosis also known as schizophrenia is defined as losing contact with reality includes hallucinations, paranoia, disordered thoughts, and delusions. Antipsychotic drugs regulate these symptoms from psychosis or any disease that can lead to psychosis. Antipsychotic drugs are mainly made up of major tranquilizers or neuroleptics also include lithium carbonate. Lithium carbonate

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    A quick overview of schizophrenia that I learned in the class was that it is a chronic brain disorder that affects the way that person goes about life such as, the way they think, feel and behave isn’t normal. About one in one hundred Americans are diagnosed with schizophrenia. Schizophrenia affects men and women equally, usually occurs between the ages fifth- teen to thirty. People with schizophrenia withdrawal themselves from reality as in they tend to hear or see things that don’t exist and at

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    counselling) and antipsychotics. Antipsychotics do not cure the subject of their psychosis but merely treat the positive symptoms by mainly blocking the dopamine receptors in the brain. Hence, new drugs and treatments are continuously in the pipeline to find a drug that manages the symptoms of schizophrenia with relatively few (preferably none) side-effects. Antipsychotic drugs are classified as either typical or atypical, based on their relative potency and side-effects

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    Antipsychotic Medications Stephanie Grace Kelly College of the Desert Antipsychotics are classified as major tranquilizers that are used to treat mental health illnesses such as schizophrenia, bipolar disorder, and other mental illnesses. They can also treat severe depression and severe anxiety. These antipsychotics drugs reduce or increase the effect of neurotransmitters in the brain to regulate levels that help transfer information throughout the brain. The neurotransmitters that are affected

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    this disease. Antipsychotic medications are the most commonly prescribed drug to treat this disease. They help to control symptoms by affecting the brains neurotransmitters dopamine and serotonin. To start there is not a cure for schizophrenia but some symptoms can be treated with antipsychotic medication. This type of medication is intended to significantly reduce and possibly stop hallucinations, delusions, paranoia and disordered thinking. There isn’t a specific antipsychotic medication recommended

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    The Pros And Cons Of CBT

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    Although CBT is natural it can make the person feel worse in order to feel better emotionally, mentally and physically. Having to talk about their history would bring back memories, making them feel worse. However, the more it is talked about the more liability for the client to feel better; working towards it step by step. This also goes hand in hand with the anti-depressant

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    but it is very treatable and manageable. There are medication and therapy, which can help the patient overcome their disorder. The two most common medications are typical antipsychotic, also known as first-generation antipsychotic and atypical antipsychotic, also known as second-generation antipsychotic. Typical antipsychotic medication was the first designed to treat schizophrenia and the most effective in treating positive symptoms (hallucinations, delusions) and unsuccessful in treating

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    The key function of antipsychotic drugs as recognised by various researchers, is the significant interference with brain dopamine function. This is underpinned by the hypothesis that symptoms of schizophrenia are produced from increased activity of the neurotransmitter dopamine. This essay, therefore discusses and examines the function and mode of action of these antipsychotics drugs with a view to critically identifying whether schizophrenia is a disorder of dopamine function. Dopamine Hypothesis

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