Anxiogenic effects of m-CPP in patients with panic disorder: comparison to caffeine's anxiogenic effects.
Journal
  Biological psychiatry.
Citation
  Biol Psychiatry. 30(10):973-84
Publication date
  1991 Nov 15
Authors
  Klein E
Zohar J
Geraci MF
Murphy DL
Uhde TW
Investigators
  Thomas W. Uhde
MeSH headings
  Anxiety Disorders
Arousal
Caffeine
Panic Disorder
Piperazines
Receptors, Serotonin
Serotonin
MeSH qualifiers
  physiopathology
physiology
diagnostic use
Abstract
  The behavioral and neuroendocrine effects of meta-chlorophenylpiperazine (m-CPP), a serotonergic agonist, were compared with the effects of caffeine, an adenosine antagonist, in panic disorder patients. Patients with panic disorder were given single oral doses of 0.5 mg/kg m-CPP, 480 mg caffeine, and placebo on separate days under double-blind conditions. Both m-CPP and caffeine had significantly greater anxiogenic and panic-inducing effects than placebo, although caffeine produced nonsignificantly greater increases on all anxiety rating scales than m-CPP. Both m-CPP and caffeine produced significant equivalent increases in plasma cortisol concentrations, but only m-CPP produced plasma prolactin increases. These findings provide further evidence implicating both the serotonergic and adenosinergic receptor systems in the neurobiology of panic disorder.
Medline ID
  92096510