Drilldown: Medicines
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Use the filters below to narrow your results.
generic:
None (26) ·
Anafranil (1) ·
Aurorix (1) ·
Caplyta (1) ·
Cymbalta, Drizalma Sprinkle, Irenka, Yentreve (1) ·
Edronax (1) ·
Fetzima (1) ·
Ludiomil (1) ·
Marplan (1) ·
Nardil (1) ·
Nexus, Eroxan (historical, late-1980s through mid-1990s) (1) ·
Norpramin (1) ·
Parnate (1) ·
Rexulti (1) ·
Savella (1) ·
Serzone (1) ·
Stablon (1) ·
Surmontil (1) ·
Tofranil (1) ·
Valdoxan (1) ·
Vivactil (1) ·
Vraylar (1) ·
Zoloft (1)
None (2) ·
5-HT2A agonist (12) ·
5-HT2A agonist; long duration (1) ·
5-HT2A agonist; MAO inhibitor (1) ·
5-HT2A agonist; milder than other 2C-x (1) ·
5-HT2A partial agonist (1) ·
Extremely potent 5-HT2A agonist; vasoconstrictor (1) ·
Extremely potent 5-HT2A agonist; very long duration (1) ·
Irreversible non-selective MAO inhibitor (3) ·
Melatonin receptor agonist; 5-HT2C antagonist (1) ·
Mu-opioid agonist; modulates glutamate AMPA receptors (1) ·
Partial agonist at D2 and 5HT1A. Antagonist at 5HT2A, α1A, α1B, α2C. More potent 5HT2A antagonism, 5HT1A partial agonism, and α1 antagonism (relative to D2 partial agonism) than aripiprazole, proposed to reduce akathisia and enhance affective/cognitive effects. (1) ·
Potent 5-HT2A agonist (5) ·
Potent 5-HT2A agonist; no oral activity (1) ·
Potent 5-HT2A agonist; very long duration (1) ·
Potent serotonin reuptake inhibitor; also NRI (1) ·
Reversible inhibitor of MAO-A (1) ·
Selective norepinephrine reuptake inhibitor (3) ·
Serotonin and norepinephrine reuptake inhibitor (3) ·
Serotonin reuptake inhibitor and 5-HT2A antagonist (1) ·
Serotonin–norepinephrine reuptake inhibition (balanced) (1) ·
Serotonin–norepinephrine reuptake inhibitor (2) ·
TrkB/BDNF'"`UNIQ--ref-00000084-QINU`"' '"`UNIQ--vote-00000085-QINU`"' (1) ·
Very potent 5-HT2A agonist; long duration (1) ·
Weak SRI; primarily H1/D2/alpha antagonist (1)
None (44) ·
Depression, anxiety, neuropathic pain, fibromyalgia, chronic musculoskeletal pain (1) ·
Schizophrenia (FDA-approved 2015). Acute manic or mixed episodes of bipolar I disorder. Bipolar I depression (FDA-approved 2019). Adjunctive treatment of major depressive disorder (FDA-approved Dec 2022). (1) ·
Schizophrenia (FDA-approved 2015). Adjunctive treatment of major depressive disorder (2015). '''Agitation associated with dementia due to Alzheimer disease''' (FDA-approved May 2023, first agent specifically approved for this problem). Investigational for PTSD (combined with sertraline). (1) ·
Schizophrenia (FDA-approved Dec 2019). Bipolar depression as monotherapy or adjunct to lithium/valproate (FDA-approved Dec 2021). (1)
None (44) ·
25 mg (1) ·
42 mg PO once daily with food (no titration) (1) ·
Schizophrenia: 1 mg PO daily × 4 days, then 2 mg daily × 3 days, then 4 mg daily. MDD adjunct: 0.5-1 mg daily, increase to 2 mg max. AD agitation: 0.5 mg daily, titrate to 2-3 mg daily. (1) ·
Schizophrenia: 1.5 mg PO daily, increase to 1.5-6 mg as tolerated. Bipolar mania: 1.5 mg, may increase to 3-6 mg. Bipolar depression: 1.5 mg daily for 14 days, then 3 mg. MDD adjunct: 1.5 mg, may increase to 3 mg. (1)
None (42) ·
45-75 min (oral) (1) ·
Antipsychotic effect over weeks (1) ·
Anxiolysis classically 3-4 weeks, continuing improvement to 8-12 weeks (1) ·
Mood: 2–4 weeks. Pain: often within 1–2 weeks. (1) ·
Weeks for psychosis/depression; AD agitation benefit emerges over weeks (1) ·
Weeks for psychosis/mood efficacy (1)
None (42) ·
Cariprazine ~2-4 d; major active metabolites desmethyl-cariprazine (DCAR) ~1-3 weeks → 'oral depot' effect with delayed steady-state and reduced effect of missed doses (1) ·
Not well characterized (1) ·
~12 hours (1) ·
~18 hours (terminal) (1) ·
~26 h (sertraline; range 13-45 h, longer in females); ~62-104 h (N-desmethylsertraline, weakly active) (1) ·
~91 hours (1)
Showing below up to 48 results in range #1 to #48.


