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US Brand Name: Risperdal

Other Brand Names: Neripros (Indonesia)
Noprenia (Indonesia)
Risperdal Consta (United Kingom; Ireland; New Zealand)
Rispid (India)
Rispolept (Poland)
Rizodal (Indonesia)
Tractal (Colombia)
Zofredal (Indonesia)
リスパダー / Risperdal (Japan). Transliterated back from the Katakana as "risupadaru" and phonetically "reesupadayru."
Рисполепт / Rispolept (Russia)
الريسبيريدون / Risperdal (Saudi Arabia, perhaps other Arabic-speaking countries) I'm guessing the name is a transliteration from the English, as Google translates the Arabic script to, "Alerispiridon."
 

Generic Name: risperidone

Other Forms: Orally disintegrating tablets.  Oral solution (I can tell you from personal experience that it tastes horrible; the PI sheet states that it absolutely cannot be chased by colas or teas).  Intramuscular injection.

What is Risperdal?: Risperdal is an Antipsychotic, specifically an atypical antipsychotic.
Read up on these sections if you haven't done so already, because they cover a lot of information about multiple medications that I'm not going to repeat on many pages.  I'm just autistic that way about not repeating myself.

What are Risperdal's FDA Approved Uses:

  • Psychosis.  Schizophrenia. - Approved 1993 for adults, approved 21 June 2007 for adolescents.
  • Bipolar Disorder - Approved December 2003 for adults, approved 21 June 2007 for adults, adolescents and children.
  • Autistic Spectrum Disorders and Pervasive Developmental Disorders in children - Approved 6 October, 2006.

What are Risperdal's Off-Label Uses. Risperdal is also used for:

 

 

 

 

 

What are Risperdal's Pros and Cons:

Risperdal's Pros: Risperdal (risperidone) is the bomb when dealing with the combination of Asperger's and bipolar, or just Asperger's and other forms of autism alone.  At least we adults who have taken it for such report that, so of course it has to be consensual, and not just drugging someone into submission, or giving some kid yet another drug in a vain attempt for a "cure."   Other than the fact it's working you can't even tell you're taking it for most applications.

 

Risperdal's Cons: While its side effect profile is low at the low dosages, at the dosages required to treat the primary approved applications - schizophrenia, psychosis and bipolar - it frequently does a number on your hormones, and hits you with sexual side effects.  Too many pediatricians and parents start at dosages too high for their autistic children, thus incurring weight gain, sedation, confusion and, oh wait, drugging the kids into submission seems to be a feature and not bug for these people who got the less-than-perfect children.  Apparently you can't use it for hallucinogen-persisting perception disorder (HPPD).

 

Click on these links to learn more about Risperdal:

Risperdal's Side Effects  How To Take Risperdal   How Risperdal Works & Compares with Other Meds  Comments Where to Buy Risperdal & Ratings

 

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Visit the Support Page for how you can help if you don't have any money laying around.   This includes reviewing Crazy Meds for Amazon.com and/or

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Take care, and keep taking your crazy meds!

Jerod

 

If you still have unanswered questions about this or other medications, including which one is, or combination of meds are the best for you, your best bet is to ask on Crazy Meds Talk.  Better yet, if you want to let the world know how they worked out for you and want to help out others in their quest for the correct meds, join the party.
If you 
want to discuss your issues, I suggest checking out one of the various support groups online.  
Otherwise, if you're letting me know about how much you like or hate the site, or  need to let me know about medication effects in private, then just drop a note to jerod23 at gmail dot com  Honestly, I usually don't have a lot of time to answer e-mail these days.  The snide autoresponse message that may or may not hit your mailbox is going to tell you the same thing.
Another problem is that you may not get a response even if I wanted to send you one.  You see, so many dickweeds with malicious intents and too much time on their hands have appropriated the crazymeds.org domain name to use for their spam, viruses and the like.  Subsequently some lazy-ass e-mail protection software authors just go by the domain name, and not the IP address.  So I've been blacklisted because of the actions of others.  Or the software just doesn't like the domain name because of the "crazy" and/or "meds."  Or your question about a particular medication will set off spam flags.  So the e-mail just wouldn't go through regardless.  Sorry.

 

 

Hey, did you find this page all by itself through Google or some other search engine? Great! But to really appreciate the entire site, you need to start here.

 

Dead tree references:

 

 

Instant Psychopharmacology 2nd Edition Ronald J. Diamond M.D. © 2002. Published by W.W. Norton

 

 

Essential Psychopharmacology Stephen M. Stahl, M.D., Ph. D. © 2000.   Published by  Cambridge University Press

 

A Primer of Drug Action Robert M. Julien, M.D., Ph. D. © 2001.  We use the Ninth Edition.  Sometimes that comes up on an Amazon search, usually it doesn't.  Published by  Worth Publishers

 

 

Physicians' Desk Reference Editions 53 & 56 Maria Deutsch & Anu Gupta, Drug Information Specialists, et al. ©  1999, 2002. Published by Medical Economics Company.

 

The Complete Guide to Psychiatric Drugs Edward Drummond, M.D. © 2000. Published by John Wiley & Sons, Inc.

 

 

Mosby's 2004 Drug Guide David Nissen PharmD, Editor.© 2004.  An imprint of Elsevier.  The edition we're using isn't listed on Amazon.

 

 

End of books used for this article.

 

 

 

Created Sunday, November 16, 2003

Last updated Saturday, May 15, 2010

 

Copyright © 2003 - 2006 Jerod Poore. All rights reserved.

 

Almost all of the material on this site is copyright © 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005 and 2006 Jerod Poore. Except, of course, the PI sheets, those are the property of the drug companies who developed the drugs the sheets are about.  And any documents that are written by other people which may be posted to this site will remain the property of the original authors.  You cannot reproduce this page or any other material on this site outside of the boundaries of fair use copying without the express permission of the copyright holder.  That's usually me, so just ask first.  That means if want to print out a few pages to take to your doctor, therapist, counselor, support group, non-understanding family members or something like that - then that's OK to just do.  Go for it!  Please.  As long as you include this copyright notice and the following disclaimer, I'm cool with it.

All rights reserved. No warranty is expressed or implied in this information. Consult one or more doctors and pharmacists before taking, or changing how you take any neurological and/or psychiatric medication. Your mileage may vary. What happened to us won't necessarily happen to you. Nobody on this site is a doctor, therapist, or a pharmacist. We don't portray them either here or on TV. Only doctors can diagnose and treat an illness. Some doctors tend to get pissed off by patients who know too much about medications, so tread lightly when and where appropriate. Diagnosing yourself from a website is like defending yourself in court, you suddenly have a fool for a doctor. Don't be a cyberchondriac, thinking you have every disease you see a website about, or that you'll get every side effect from every medication. Self-prescribing is just as dangerous.  All information on this site has been obtained through personal experience, the experiences of my friends, the experiences of people reported on online support groups, and from sources that are referenced throughout the site.  Know your sources!  As such the information presented here is not a substitute for real medical advice from your real doctor, just a compliment to it.  No neurologists, psychiatrists, therapists or pharmacists were harmed in the production of this website. All brand names of the drugs listed in this site are the trademarks of the companies listed after them in the pages about the drugs, even though those companies may or may not have been acquired by other companies who may or may not be listed in this site by the time you read this. Always read the PI sheet that comes with your medications and never ever throw them away.  If you didn't get a PI sheet, demand one.  Loudly.  Crazy Meds is not responsible for the content of sites we provide links to.  We like them, or they're paid advertisements, or they're something you should read to make an informed decision about a particular med.  Sometimes they're more than one of those things.  But what's on those sites is their business, not ours.  Very little information about visitors to this site is collected or saved. And from time to time I do look at search terms used to find it in an effort to make the information I present more relevant. Use only as directed. Void where prohibited.

 

"Everything is true, nothing is permitted." - Jerod Poore