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Dive into the research topics where John S. Kennedy is active.

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Featured researches published by John S. Kennedy.


Journal of Clinical Psychopharmacology | 1999

Preferential cerebrospinal fluid acetylcholinesterase inhibition by rivastigmine in humans

John S. Kennedy; Ronald J. Polinsky; Benjamin Johnson; Peter T. Loosen; Albert Enz; Robert Laplanche; Dennis E. Schmidt; Linda C. Mancione; Winston C. V. Parris; Michael H. Ebert

This study sought to examine the feasibility of prolonged assessment of acetylcholinesterase (AChE) activity in the cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) of volunteers and to test the hypothesis that rivastigmine (ENA-713; Exelon, Novartis Pharma AG, Basel, Switzerland) selectively inhibits AChE in CSF in humans at a dose producing minimal inhibition of the peripheral enzyme. Lumbar CSF samples were collected continuously (0.1 mL x min(-1)) for 49 hours from eight healthy volunteers who took either placebo or a single oral dose of rivastigmine (3 mg). CSF specimens and samples of blood cells and blood plasma were analyzed at intervals for rivastigmine and its metabolite NAP 226-90 ([-] [3-([1-dimethylaminolethyl)-phenol]), erythrocyte AChE activity, CSF AChE activity, and plasma and CSF butyrylcholinesterase (BuChE) activity. Safety evaluations were performed 23 hours after drug dosing and at the end of the study. Evaluable data were obtained from six subjects. The mean time to maximal rivastigmine plasma concentration (tmax) was 0.83 +/- 0.26 hours, the mean maximal plasma concentration (Cmax) was 4.88 +/- 3.82 ng x mL(-1), the mean plasma area under the concentration versus time curve (AUC0-infinity) was 7.43 +/- 4.74 ng x hr x mL(-1), and the mean plasma t1/2 was 0.85 +/- 0.115 hours. The concentration of rivastigmine in CSF was lower than the quantification limit for assay (0.65 ng x mL(-1)), but NAP 226-90 reached a mean Cmax of 3.14 +/- 0.57 ng x mL(-1). Only minimal inhibition of erythrocyte AChE activity (approximately 3%) was observed. Inhibition of AChE in the CSF after rivastigmine administration was significantly greater than after placebo for up to 8.4 hours after the dose and was maximal (40%) at 2.4 hours. Plasma BuChE activity was significantly lower after rivastigmine than after placebo, but this was not clinically relevant. BuChE activity in CSF was significantly lower after rivastigmine than after placebo for up to 3.6 hours after dosing, but this difference was not sustained. This study confirms the feasibility of using continuous measurement of AChE activity in CSF over prolonged periods, that rivastigmine markedly inhibits CSF AChE after a single oral dose of 3 mg, and that the inhibition of central AChE is substantially greater than that of peripheral AChE or BuChE.


International Journal of Geriatric Psychiatry | 2001

A current review of olanzapine's safety in the geriatric patient: from pre-clinical pharmacology to clinical data

John S. Kennedy; Frank P. Bymaster; Leslie M. Schuh; David O. Calligaro; George G. Nomikos; Christian C. Felder; Mark Bernauer; Bruce J. Kinon; Robert W. Baker; Donald P. Hay; H. John Roth; Martin Dossenbach; Christopher Kaiser; Charles M. Beasley; John H. Holcombe; Mark B. Effron; Alan Breier

Olanzapine (OLZ) is unique among currently available antipsychotic medications in its antagonism of a range of receptor systems including dopamine, norepinephrine, serotonin, acetylcholine, and histamine. Olanzapines mechanistic complexity provides a broad efficacy profile in patients with schizophrenia and acute, pure or mixed mania. Patients experience symptomatic relief of mania, anxiety, hallucinations, delusions, and agitation/aggression and reduced depressive, negative, and some cognitive symptoms. This paper will review the safety profile of OLZ, focusing on the elderly, where data are available.


International Journal of Geriatric Psychiatry | 2001

The central cholinergic system profile of olanzapine compared with placebo in Alzheimer's disease

John S. Kennedy; A. Zagar; Frank P. Bymaster; George G. Nomikos; P. T. Trzepacz; Julie A. Gilmore; M. D. Rotelli; Alan Breier; Gary D. Tollefson

The objective of this analysis was to compare the treatment‐emergent central anticholinergic‐like adverse events experienced during treatment with olanzapine versus placebo in patients with psychosis and/or agitation due to Alzheimers disease (AD). In addition, changes in cognition were assessed in a subgroup of patients with mild to moderate cognitive impairment.


Neuropsychopharmacology | 2003

Association of a Critical CSF Tryptophan Threshold Level with Depressive Relapse

Ronald M. Salomon; John S. Kennedy; Benjamin Johnson; Dennis E. Schmidt; Joseph Kwentus; Harry E. Gwirtsman; Michael H. Ebert

This work studies association between relapse during acute tryptophan depletion (ATD) and CSF level of tryptophan (TRP) in remitted depressives treated with sertraline or bupropion. Eight medication-responding depressives ingested an ATD amino acid mixture during 48-h continuous CSF sampling before and after treatment. Mood rating scores were compared with nadir levels of TRP in CSF. CSF TRP nadirs averaged 8.7% of am baselines in remitted patients. Mood relapsed whenever the CSF nadir was below 40 nmol/l TRP in remitted patients, and never when above (Fishers exact test, P=0.029). Relapsing medication responders also showed very low preantidepressant ATD-induced nadirs. ATD-induced relapses were associated with low CSF TRP levels. Individual susceptibility to depletion may be independent of antidepressant treatment, mood state, or treatment status. Resistance to relapse may invoke an undefined, protective CNS mechanism against extremely low CSF levels of TRP during ATD.


Life Sciences | 2002

Serial cerebrospinal fluid tryptophan and 5-hydroxy indoleacetic acid concentrations in healthy human subjects.

John S. Kennedy; Harry E. Gwirtsman; Dennis E. Schmidt; Benjamin Johnson; Elliot M. Fielstein; Ronald M. Salomon; Richard Shiavi; Michael H. Ebert; Winston C. V. Parris; Peter T. Loosen

The role of the serotonergic system in the pathogenesis of behavioral disorders such as depression, alcoholism, obsessive-compulsive disorder, and violence is not completely understood. Measurement of the concentration of neurotransmitters and their metabolites in cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) is considered among the most valid, albeit indirect, methods of assessing central nervous system function in man. However, most studies in humans have measured lumbar CSF concentrations only at single time points, thus not taking into account rhythmic or episodic variations in levels of neurotransmitters, precursors, or metabolites. We have continuously sampled lumbar CSF via subarachnoid catheter in 12 healthy volunteers, aged 20-65 years. One ml (every 10 min) CSF samples were collected at a rate of 0.1ml/min for 24-hour (h), and the levels of tryptophan (TRP) and 5-hydroxy indoleacetic acid (5-HIAA) were measured. Variability across all 12 subjects was significantly greater (P < 0.0001) than the variability seen in repeated analysis of a reference CSF sample for both 5-HIAA (32.0% vs 7.9%) and TRP (25.4% vs 7.0%), confirming the presence of significant biological variability during the 24-hr period examined. This variability could not be explained solely by meal related effects. Cosinor analysis of the 24-hr TRP concentrations from all subjects revealed a significant diurnal pattern in CSF TRP levels, whereas the 5-HIAA data were less consistent. These studies indicate that long-term serial CSF sampling reveals diurnal and biological variability not evident in studies based on single CSF samples.


Neuropsychopharmacology | 2005

Treatment Enhances Ultradian Rhythms of CSF Monoamine Metabolites in Patients with Major Depressive Episodes

Ronald M. Salomon; John S. Kennedy; Benjamin Johnson; Jennifer Urbano Blackford; Dennis E. Schmidt; Joseph Kwentus; Harry E. Gwirtsman; John F Gouda; Richard Shiavi

Unipolar and bipolar depressions show abnormal behavioral manifestations of ultradian (less than 24 h) rhythms, but abnormal rhythms of the central neurotransmitters thought to be important for depression pathophysiology (eg dopamine (DA) and serotonin (5-HT)) have not been shown in this time frame. Since antidepressant treatments normalize disrupted rhythms in depression (eg rapid-eye-movement sleep and hormonal rhythms), we hypothesized that depression-related changes in ultradian oscillations of DA and 5-HT might be revealed during antidepressant treatment. Cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) samples collected q10 min for 24 h in 13 patients experiencing major depressive episodes (MDE) before and after treatment for 5 weeks with sertraline or bupropion were assayed for levels of homovanillic acid (HVA) and 5-hydroxyindoleacetic acid (5-HIAA), and their ratio was calculated. Data were analyzed in the frequency domain using Fourier transforms and multivariate permutation testing. Antidepressant treatments were associated with decreased variance for 5-HIAA, increased variance for HVA, and markedly increased variance for the HVA : 5-HIAA ratio (p<0.05, p<0.02, and p<0.003, respectively). With treatment, the correlations between 5-HIAA and HVA weakened (p=0.06). Power spectral density (PSD—the Fourier magnitude squared) of the 5-HIAA signals at periods of 1.75 and 3.7 h (both p<0.05) decreased, while circadian cycling of HVA levels (p<0.05) and of the ratio (p<0.005) increased after treatment. The PSD of the full-length HVA : 5-HIAA ratio series after treatment increased in rapid variability (20–103 min periods, p<0.05). Spectrographic windowing demonstrated a focal span of enhanced HVA : 5-HIAA ratio variability following antidepressant treatment, in an approximately 84-min period through the evening (p<0.05). Periodic neurotransmitter relationships in depressed patients were altered by treatment in this analysis of a small data set. This may represent a baseline abnormality in the regulation of periodic functions involved in the depression pathophysiology, but it could also be due to an unrelated antidepressant effect. Further studies including comparisons with healthy subject data are in progress.


Journal of Clinical Psychopharmacology | 1995

Principles and Practice of Geriatric Psychiatry

John S. Kennedy

Both scientific foundations of and clinical approaches to psychiatric disease are discussed by a range of experts who rely on evidence-based clinical guidelines and outcomes data. Most chapters include case studies that illuminate the approaches to diagnosis and treatment. The books five sections include basic principles of evaluation and treatment for specific disorders; appendices offer further insight into pharmacotherapy and neuroanatomic foundation of psychiatric diseases.


European Journal of Pharmacology | 2001

Potent antagonism of 5-HT3 and 5-HT6 receptors by olanzapine

Frank P. Bymaster; Julie F. Falcone; Delbert Bauzon; John S. Kennedy; Kathryn W. Schenck; Neil W. DeLapp; Marlene L. Cohen


The Journal of Clinical Psychiatry | 2003

Comparison of risperidone and olanzapine in the control of negative symptoms of chronic schizophrenia and related psychotic disorders in patients aged 50 to 65 years

Peter D. Feldman; Christopher Kaiser; John S. Kennedy; Virginia K. Sutton; Pierre V. Tran; Gary D. Tollefson; Fan Zhang; Alan Breier


Archive | 2003

Agitation in patients with dementia : a practical guide to diagnosis and management

Donald P. Hay; David T. Klein; Linda K. Hay; George T. Grossberg; John S. Kennedy

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