Date Created: 22/01/2000 Last Modified: 21/08/2000 Last Checked: 21/10/2002
The TCAs are a heterogeneous group of drugs in terms of their pharmacological actions; they are only similar in structure. Although the structural similarity of drugs is very close their pharmacological actions may be very different. For instance, clomipramine is a very close structural analogue of chlorpromazine, but their effects are very different.
Any discussion that says 'the tricyclics .........' is certain to be an imprecise generalisation.
"A generalisation about a 'class' of drugs may tell us more about the restricted knowledge of the author than it does about the pharmacological properties of drugs in question."
Several currently widely marketed TCAs could be withdrawn without being missed, or used only as cheap anti-histamines / sedatives (trimipramine, doxepin and probably dothiepin).
It is logical to select four of the TCAs for antidepressant treatment and master the safe use of those. Look at the notes on 'receptor affinities' and 'toxicity' in the full version of 'Psychopharmacology Update Notes'; they will demonstrate the rationale for the following preferences.