Alprazolam in the treatment of two subsamples of patients with late luteal phase dysphoric disorder: a double-blind, placebo-controlled crossover study

Obstetrics and gynecology, 84(3), 379-385

PMID 8058235 Source

Abstract

Objective

To assess the efficacy of alprazolam in the treatment of two groups of patients diagnosed with late luteal phase dysphoric disorder (LLPDD). The first group met only the diagnostic criteria for LLPDD. The second group experienced LLPDD and mild symptoms of anxiety and depression during the follicular phase.

Methods

A double-blind, placebo-controlled crossover design was used. Patients were treated with alprazolam and placebo for 3 months each and completed daily measures of anxiety, tension, depression, irritability, and feelings of being out of control.

Results

The response to alprazolam differed significantly by group. For the first group, alprazolam (0.25 mg three times a day) relieved the severity of tension (P = .001), irritability (P = .005), anxiety (P = .008), and feelings of being out of control (P = .012) more than placebo. Few side effects were reported; the incidence (P = .001) and severity (P = .001) of side effects were dose-related. Alprazolam and placebo did not differ for the second group, and the incidence and severity of side effects were unrelated to dose.

Conclusions

Alprazolam benefits women diagnosed solely with LLPDD. It is not recommended for patients who experience LLPDD as well as symptoms of mild anxiety or depression during the follicular phase.

Topics

premenstrual dysphoric disorder PMDD treatment, alprazolam luteal phase symptoms, late luteal phase dysphoric disorder therapy, anxiety irritability premenstrual syndrome, pharmacologic treatment PMDD randomized trial, LLPDD medication crossover study, premenstrual anxiety tension management, luteal phase mood symptoms medication, benzodiazepine premenstrual syndrome efficacy, follicular phase symptoms versus PMDD

Cite this article

Berger, C. P., & Presser, B. (1994). Alprazolam in the treatment of two subsamples of patients with late luteal phase dysphoric disorder: a double-blind, placebo-controlled crossover study. *Obstetrics and gynecology*, *84*(3), 379-385.

Related articles