OBJECTIVE: The authors sought to determine if an acute dose of
dextroamphetamine might have positive effects on affect and cognition in
schizophrenic patients maintained on a regimen of haloperidol and, if so,
what variables might predict such improvements. METHOD: Twenty- one
patients with chronic schizophrenia who were hospitalized on a research
ward received a single oral dose of dextroamphetamine (0.25 mg/kg) in a
double-blind, placebo-controlled, crossover study. All patients were
receiving 0.4 mg/kg per day of haloperidol. Cognitive tests, motor tests,
global ratings, mood ratings, and videotape ratings were used to determine
the effect of the coadministration of these drugs. Ventricle-brain ratios
derived from CT scans were used to predict response to the coadministration
of these drugs. RESULTS: Amphetamine improved performance on a measure of
concept formation on the Wisconsin Card Sorting Test but did not result in
changes in performance on tests of memory or attention. As a group, the
patients were more active and performed psychomotor tests more quickly
while receiving amphetamine. Six patients were judged by clinical raters to
have improved in terms of affect, cooperation, and engagement with the
environment. Improvement was associated with enlarged cerebral ventricles
and increases in blink rate from the placebo to the active drug condition.
No patient unequivocally worsened. CONCLUSIONS: These results may be
consistent with the theory that coadministration of amphetamine and
haloperidol produces relatively selective enhancement of cortical
dopaminergic activity. However, because of the acute nature of the trial
and the specialized research environment in which it was conducted, the
authors do not advocate amphetamine as a routine clinical treatment of
schizophrenia.
Abstract Teaser