TY - JOUR PY - 2020// TI - The rise and fall and rise of benzodiazepines: a return of the stigmatized and repressed JO - Revista brasileira de psiquiatria A1 - Balon, Richard A1 - Starcevic, Vladan A1 - Silberman, Edward A1 - Cosci, Fiammetta A1 - Dubovsky, Steven A1 - Fava, Giovanni A. A1 - Nardi, Antonio E. A1 - Rickels, Karl A1 - Salzman, Carl A1 - Shader, Richard I. A1 - Sonino, Nicoletta SP - ePub EP - ePub VL - ePub IS - ePub N2 -

The path of discovery has varied for various psychotropic medications, at times beginning with serendipitous findings by keen observers (e.g., the discovery of imipramine’s antidepressant properties by Roland Kuhn), followed by more targeted research to expand the armamentarium with similar medications. In the mid-1940s, Frank Berger observed that mephenesin had calming, yet not sedating, properties in rodents. This compound had several disadvantages, such as very short duration of action and weak activity. Thus, Berger with a colleague at Carter-Wallace, a small pharmaceutical company, later synthetized meprobamate, overcoming the shortcomings of mephenesin. By the mid-1950s meprobamate became a blockbuster drug under the name of Miltown, in spite of not performing better than placebo in clinical trials.1 Berger wanted to call it a sedative but was persuaded by others that it provided tranquil feelings, thus tranquilizers (and, later, minor tranquilizers) were “born.” ...

Language: en

LA - en SN - 1516-4446 UR - http://dx.doi.org/10.1590/1516-4446-2019-0773 ID - ref1 ER -