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Do central antiadrenergic actions contribute to the atypical properties of clozapine?

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Do central antiadrenergic actions contribute to the atypical properties of clozapine?

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Full neuropharmacological understanding of the atypical antipsychotic agent clozapine remains elusive. Antidopaminergic actions of most neuroleptics probably contribute to their antipsychotic benefits, but also to neurological side-effects. Clinical evidence of abnormalities of dopamine (DA) and serotonin (5-HT) in psychotic disorders is inconsistent, but there is substantial metabolic and post-mortem evidence for hyperactivity of noradrenaline (NA). Clozapine is only weakly antidopaminergic but is a potent antagonist at brain alpha 1-adrenergic, 5-HT2-serotonergic, and muscarinic receptors. Its apparent limbic-over-extrapyramidal neurophysiological selectivity can be mimicked by combining a typical neuroleptic with a central alpha 1 antagonist. Clozapine strongly upregulates alpha 1, but not DA, receptor abundance, and may supersensitise alpha 1 but not DA receptors in rat brain. Clozapine also selectively increases activity of NA neurons and metabolic turnover in NA more than DA area

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