Metabolic syndrome and atypical antipsychotics: Possibility of prediction and control.

Unidad de Hospitalización de Psiquiatría, Complejo Asistencial Universitario de León, León, España. Electronic address: clarafranch@hotmail.com. Unidad de Hospitalización de Psiquiatría, Hospital Clínico Universitario, Valladolid, España. Facultad de Enfermería, Universidad de Valladolid, Valladolid, España.

Revista de psiquiatria y salud mental. 2017;(1):38-44

Abstract

INTRODUCTION Schizophrenia and other psychotic disorders are associated with high morbidity and mortality, due to inherent health factors, genetic factors, and factors related to psychopharmacological treatment. Antipsychotics, like other drugs, have side-effects that can substantially affect the physical health of patients, with substantive differences in the side-effect profile and in the patients in which these side-effects occur. To understand and identify these risk groups could help to prevent the occurrence of the undesired effects. MATERIAL AND METHOD A prospective study, with 24 months follow-up, was conducted in order to analyse the physical health of severe mental patients under maintenance treatment with atypical antipsychotics, as well as to determine any predictive parameters at anthropometric and/or analytical level for good/bad outcome of metabolic syndrome in these patients. RESULTS There were no significant changes in the physical and biochemical parameters individually analysed throughout the different visits. The baseline abdominal circumference (lambda Wilks P=.013) and baseline HDL-cholesterol levels (lambda Wilks P=.000) were the parameters that seem to be more relevant above the rest of the metabolic syndrome constituents diagnosis criteria as predictors in the long-term. CONCLUSIONS In the search for predictive factors of metabolic syndrome, HDL-cholesterol and abdominal circumference at the time of inclusion were selected, as such that the worst the baseline results were, the higher probability of long-term improvement.

Methodological quality

Publication Type : Clinical Trial

Metadata

MeSH terms : Psychotic Disorders