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Study of fenfluramine in outpatients with the syndrome of autism

Authors :
Phillip C. Schroth
B.J. Freeman
Arthur Yuwiler
Edward Geller
Edward R. Ritvo
Patricia Novak
Alice Yokota
Source :
The Journal of pediatrics. 105(5)
Publication Year :
1984

Abstract

Fenfluramine was administered to 14 outpatient children with the syndrome of autism to determine whether previously produced decreases in blood serotonin concentrations and clinical improvements could be reinstituted. A double-blind medication-placebo crossover design was used. Each patient received fenfluramine 1.5 mg/kg daily (0.75 mg/kg twice daily) for 8 months, followed by placebo for 2 months. Blood serotonin levels promptly fell approximately 49% regardless of baseline levels. Clinical improvement returned, and on some scales gains after 8 months exceeded those noted after only 4 months of treatment. Significant correlations emerged among the amount of clinical response, initially high verbal IQs, and low blood serotonin concentrations. Compliance was excellent, and no clinically relevant side effects or weight changes occurred. It appears that fenfluramine is effective in ameliorating specific symptoms in certain autistic patients. The extent and mechanism of its action remain to be discovered.

Details

ISSN :
00223476
Volume :
105
Issue :
5
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
The Journal of pediatrics
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....00c6d07d540f5b4f7c20b48f28b2677e