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"It is an antipsychotic, which can be used for the treatment of schizophrenia[2], but it is primarily used to control deviant, antisocial hypersexual behaviour[3], and is sometimes prescribed to sex offenders as a condition of their parole, as an alternative to anti-androgen drugs such as cyproterone.[4]"
In Germany, benperidol (Glianimon and generics) is used mainly as a highly potent antipsychotic in severely psychotic and manic (e.g. schizophrenia, almost exclusively in acute pharmacological intervention) patients, though not nearly as often as haloperidol and 2nd generation antipsychotics. No specific use in antisocial hypersexual behaviour (or, not more than other neuroleptics/antipsychotics) occurs; this drug is quite infamous among psychiatric patients and personal to be the ultimative, "superpotent" neuroleptic with massive EPMS side-effects.
Is it used in the UK really as the "antipsychotic of choice" for sexual deviants, as could be assumed from the publications quoted?
Also, the "dichotomisation of choice" of pharmacotherapy between an antiandrogen or an antipsychotic seems not really close to practical therapy routine; cyproterone treatment is quite often co-administred with psychopharmaceutical medication and non-pharmaceutical treatment options... But these are just my impressions and thoughts...--
Spiperon
12:43, 1 May 2007 (UTC)
"Allthough benperidol is known for its highest exposure at dopamine d2, and d3 receptors therefore leading the typical neuroleptics potenz statistics, it differentiates itself from, for example, haloperidole by its behaving (haloperidole: inverse agonist, benperidol: Antagonist) and its elimination half-life. This could mean that benperidol does not have to also leading the statistics in epms-potential."
Can I post this? I don't have an explizit source but my facts stick to "already posted in Wikipedia Knowledge" 100%.
Please note that while this card is activated, no other summoning is allowed. After three complete rounds, including both your and your opponent's turns since activation, you have the opportunity to send thi Materie34 ( talk) 22:19, 24 July 2023 (UTC)
This article is rated Start-class on Wikipedia's
content assessment scale. It is of interest to the following WikiProjects: | |||||||||||||||||||||
|
Ideal sources for Wikipedia's health content are defined in the guideline
Wikipedia:Identifying reliable sources (medicine) and are typically
review articles. Here are links to possibly useful sources of information about Benperidol.
|
"It is an antipsychotic, which can be used for the treatment of schizophrenia[2], but it is primarily used to control deviant, antisocial hypersexual behaviour[3], and is sometimes prescribed to sex offenders as a condition of their parole, as an alternative to anti-androgen drugs such as cyproterone.[4]"
In Germany, benperidol (Glianimon and generics) is used mainly as a highly potent antipsychotic in severely psychotic and manic (e.g. schizophrenia, almost exclusively in acute pharmacological intervention) patients, though not nearly as often as haloperidol and 2nd generation antipsychotics. No specific use in antisocial hypersexual behaviour (or, not more than other neuroleptics/antipsychotics) occurs; this drug is quite infamous among psychiatric patients and personal to be the ultimative, "superpotent" neuroleptic with massive EPMS side-effects.
Is it used in the UK really as the "antipsychotic of choice" for sexual deviants, as could be assumed from the publications quoted?
Also, the "dichotomisation of choice" of pharmacotherapy between an antiandrogen or an antipsychotic seems not really close to practical therapy routine; cyproterone treatment is quite often co-administred with psychopharmaceutical medication and non-pharmaceutical treatment options... But these are just my impressions and thoughts...--
Spiperon
12:43, 1 May 2007 (UTC)
"Allthough benperidol is known for its highest exposure at dopamine d2, and d3 receptors therefore leading the typical neuroleptics potenz statistics, it differentiates itself from, for example, haloperidole by its behaving (haloperidole: inverse agonist, benperidol: Antagonist) and its elimination half-life. This could mean that benperidol does not have to also leading the statistics in epms-potential."
Can I post this? I don't have an explizit source but my facts stick to "already posted in Wikipedia Knowledge" 100%.
Please note that while this card is activated, no other summoning is allowed. After three complete rounds, including both your and your opponent's turns since activation, you have the opportunity to send thi Materie34 ( talk) 22:19, 24 July 2023 (UTC)