ISSN: 2329-6488
+44 1223 790975
Ali Mahmood Khan
Kings County Hospital Center,
NY 11203
Tanzania
Review Article
Safety and Efficacy of Antipsychotics in Pregnancy and Lactation
Author(s): Yassar I Odhejo, Afshan Jafri, Hema Madhuri Mekala, Mudasar Hassan, Ali Mahmood Khan, Sabrina K Dar, Rizwan Ahmed
Yassar I Odhejo, Afshan Jafri, Hema Madhuri Mekala, Mudasar Hassan, Ali Mahmood Khan, Sabrina K Dar, Rizwan Ahmed
The clinical profiles of antipsychotic medications have improved dramatically since the first generation was introduced in the 1950s. Second Generation Antipsychotic medications (SGAs), which became available in 1990, generate fewer side effects, including reduced incidence of extrapyramidal symptoms such as hyperprolactinemia. This improves the female patients’ ability to become pregnant, a process which is compromised by first generation drugs. However, use of antipsychotic medications has become increasingly prevalent. The likelihood of females with depression, bipolar disorder, psychosis to have an unplanned pregnancy, and the incidence of foetal exposure to psychotropic drugs during the first trimester of pregnancy has also increased. The paucity of exposure and outcome data leaves the safety and effects of use of antipsychotic medications during pregnancy as a subject to c.. View More»
DOI:
10.4172/2329-6488.1000267