D. Healy et H. Healy, The clinical pharmacologic profile of reboxetine: does it involve the putative neurobiological substrates of wellbeing?, J AFFECT D, 51(3), 1998, pp. 313-322
Following a review of the clinical trials of reboxetine, a new nonadrenegic
reuptake inhibitor antidepressant, this paper presents a heuristic theoret
ical framework to better understand selective antidepressant action. For ov
er three decades, the dominant views of antidepressant action have seen the
se agents active across all constitutional types and regardless of social s
etting. An increasing number of studies using quality of life methods are a
t odds with this view. This paper summarizes several of these studies, alon
g with two studies of the effects of reboxetine on the quality of life, whi
ch reveal differential effects of selective agents that demand alternative
explanations to the conventional monoamine theories. The authors submit tha
t any revisions in our understanding of what is happening will have to pay
attention to temperamental inputs that antedate affective episodes and to t
he sense of wellbeing and level of residual symptoms patients have on treat
ment after the acute phase of their illness has remitted. Obviously much mo
re research needs to be done in this area. This invited paper sketches out,
in very general terms, some provocative possibilities of how future unders
tanding of antidepressants, temperament and their neurobiologic substrates
could lead to better matching of specific antidepressants to specific tempe
rament types. (C) 1998 Elsevier Science B.V. All rights reserved.