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Journal Article

Citation

Kuperman S, Calarge C, Kolar A, Holman TL, Barnett M, Perry P. Ann. Clin. Psychiatry 2011; 23(4): 270-276.

Affiliation

Division of Child Psychiatry, University of Iowa, Carver College of Medicine, Iowa City, IA USA.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2011, American Academy of Clinical Psychiatrists)

DOI

unavailable

PMID

22073384

Abstract

BACKGROUND: The adverse effect profiles of typical and atypical antipsychotics are problematic because of their extrapyramidal and endocrine adverse effects, respectively. METHODS: Ten adolescent male patients diagnosed with conduct disorder received aripiprazole in doses of ≤20 mg/d in an open-label, intent-to-treat design to establish and characterize the efficacy of the drug in reducing aggressive behavior. RESULTS: Based on clinician and parent observations, aripiprazole was effective in reducing aggressive behavior in adolescent boys. The change in clinician-observed aggression ratings appears to have been driven by a decrease in physical aggression, whereas the change in parent-observed aggression ratings appears to have been driven by a decrease in verbal aggression and aggression against objects and animals. CONCLUSIONS: Aripiprazole was an effective and relatively well-tolerated treatment for overall aggression in adolescent males with conduct disorder, in the view of both clinicians and parents. Depending on the observer, aripiprazole improved aggression categorized as physical aggression, verbal aggression, and aggression against objects and animals.


Language: en

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