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Nasal congestion with iloperidone therapy in a case series

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Published on:
Journal of Young Pharmacists, 2013; 5(3):108-109
Letter To The Editor | doi:10.1016/j.jyp.2013.08.003
Authors:

Saibal Das

Nalmuri Block Primary Health Centre, West Bengal 743 502, India

Indranil Saha

Department of Psychiatry, Medical College, Kolkata 700 073, India

Somnath Mondal*

Indian Pharmacopoeia Commission, Ministry of Health and Family Welfare, Government of India,

Ghaziabad 201 002, India Department of Clinical and Experimental Pharmacology, Calcutta School of Tropical Medicine, Kolkata 700 073, India

Sanjib Bandyopadhyay

Department of Community Medicine, Burdwan Medical College and Hospital, West Bengal 713 104, India

Abstract:

Iloperidone or 40-[3-[4-(6-Fluoro-1,2-benzisoxazol-3-yl)piperidino] propoxy]-30-methoxyacetophenone is an atypical psychotropic agent belonging to piperidinyl-benzisoxazole derivative, having marked antagonistic actions on adrenergic, serotonergic, and dopaminergic receptors. It is an excellent emerging drug in anxiety and schizophrenia, and particularly useful in acute stages due to involvement of single nucleotide polymorphism in action. Iloperidone is metabolized primarily by 3 biotransformation pathways: carbonyl reduction, hydroxylation (mediated by CYP2D6) and O-demethylation (mediated by CYP3A4). There are 2 predominant iloperidone metabolites, P95 and P88, having a higher plasma concentration compared with the parent compound. The half lives of these metabolites, drug concentration in plasma and toxicities vary in fast and slow metabolizers of CYP2D6.