Phenothiazines are usually used to treat psychosis or
schizophrenia; they're also given to patients with persistent
nausea, premature ejaculation, or severe itching, and they're sometimes used to bring people down from bad LSD trips. They exert most of
their effects by blocking dopamine-2 receptors, but they also block
receptors for acetylcholine, serotonin, histamine, and
norepinephrine.
The phenothiazines work well--although they don't cure
schizophrenia entirely, they can reduce or suppress the hallucinations and
delusions that plague schizophrenics, and they've allowed countless
patients to leave mental hospitals and return to
productive lives. Unfortunately, these drugs also come with several
unpleasant side-effects: many patients experience impotence, sleepiness,
dry mouth, constipation, hypotension, and blurred vision; if they're
taken for a long time, the phenothiazines can produce akathisia and
irreversible tardive dyskinesia. Many patients get irritated with these
side-effects (particularly impotence) and decide to stop taking the
drugs. Unfortunately, their symptoms then return, so they're
reinstitutionalized, remedicated, and ultimately re-released; eventually, many patients stop taking the drugs again, leading to
an endless cycle that's known as the revolving door phenomenon.
(Some of the butyrophenones and newer-generation
antipsychotics may have fewer side-effects, but in
many cases it's still a matter of debate.)
Common phenothiazines and their generic names:
Brand Name.......Generic Name
Compazine........prochlorperazine
Mellaril.........thioridazine
Proketazine......carphenazine
Prolixin.........fluphenazine
Serentil.........mesoridazine
Stelazine........trifluoperazine
Thorazine........chlorpromazine
Tindal...........acetophenazine
Trilafon.........perphenazine
Vesprin..........triflupromazine