Depression Lowers Blood Pressure, but Antidepressants Increase It

 

Psychiatry and Mental Health/Antipsychotic Treatment in Major Mental Illness
Pre-Activity Questionnaire
 
1. Atypical, or second-generation, antipsychotics as a group are:
Consistent in mechanism of action
Highly variable in their side-effect profiles
Uniformly more effective than first-generation antipsychotics in treating positive and negative symptoms
Significantly less likely to produce extrapyramidal side effects than are all first-generation antipsychotics.


 
2. "Atypical" antipsychotics are described as such because:
They are more effective in patients whose symptom clusters are uncommon
They have no effect on dopamine transmitters and are therefore distinct from earlier antipsychotic agents
They treat only negative symptoms
They are associated with a lower rate of extrapyramidal side effects than are earlier agents and therefore are distinct from earlier antipsychotic agents.

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