Ryan S. Sultan, MD

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Neuroscience-Based Nomenclature (NbN)

Modernizing How We Name Psychiatric Medications

→ The Problem with Traditional Medication Names

Why are medications for anxiety called "antidepressants"? Why do we give "stimulants" to children who can't sit still? Why do "antipsychotics" treat tics, aggression, and mood disorders—not just psychosis?

Traditional psychiatric medication names are outdated, confusing, and stigmatizing. They're based on 1960s-1970s concepts and don't reflect modern neuroscience. Neuroscience-based Nomenclature (NbN) offers a better way.


What is Neuroscience-Based Nomenclature (NbN)?

Neuroscience-based Nomenclature (NbN) is a revolutionary classification system that names psychiatric medications based on their pharmacology and mechanism of action—not the disorder they were first approved to treat.

Developed by an international task force of leading neuroscience organizations (including the European College of Neuropsychopharmacology, American College of Neuropsychopharmacology, and others), NbN provides a scientifically accurate, less stigmatizing, and more informative way to understand psychiatric medications.

Key Publication:

Sultan, R. S., Correll, C. U., Zohar, J., Zalsman, G., & Veenstra-VanderWeele, J. (2018). "What's in a Name? Moving to Neuroscience-based Nomenclature in Pediatric Psychopharmacology." Journal of the American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry, 57(10), 719-721.

Read the full publication | View citation details


Why Traditional Names Are Problematic

1. They're Outdated

Current psychotropic nomenclature is largely based on concepts from the 1960s and 1970s. "Antidepressants" don't bind to "depression receptors"—they block monoamine transporters. "Stimulants" don't just promote wakefulness—they modulate dopamine and norepinephrine systems.

2. They're Confusing for Patients

Real examples of patient confusion:

3. They're Stigmatizing

Names conflate diagnoses with treatments. Children on "antidepressants" for OCD may believe they're "depressed." The label "antipsychotic" implies psychosis, even when prescribed for autism irritability, tics, or mood disorders.

4. They Obscure Important Differences

Under current naming, bupropion, mirtazapine, duloxetine, and fluoxetine are all "antidepressants"—yet they vary wildly in mechanisms, side effects, and indications. When our naming fails to distinguish medicines, it's hard for patients to understand why one "antidepressant" might work after another has failed.


How NbN Works: The New System

11 Pharmacological Domains

Instead of disease-based names, NbN classifies medications by their neuroscience targets:

  1. Acetylcholine - Memory, cognition, attention
  2. Dopamine - Motivation, reward, movement, psychosis
  3. GABA - Inhibition, anxiety, sleep
  4. Glutamate - Excitation, learning, mood
  5. Histamine - Wakefulness, appetite, allergies
  6. Ion Channels - Neuronal excitability, seizures
  7. Lithium - Enzymatic actions (unique category)
  8. Melatonin - Circadian rhythm, sleep
  9. Norepinephrine - Alertness, attention, arousal
  10. Opioid - Pain, reward, addiction
  11. Serotonin - Mood, anxiety, OCD, appetite

10 Modes of Action

NbN describes how medications work at the molecular level:


Examples: Old Names vs. NbN

Medication Old Name NbN Classification What It Means
Methylphenidate
(Ritalin, Concerta)
"Stimulant" Dopamine & Norepinephrine
Reuptake Inhibitor & Releaser
Blocks and releases dopamine/norepinephrine to improve focus
Fluoxetine
(Prozac)
"Antidepressant" Serotonin
Reuptake Inhibitor
Blocks serotonin reuptake—treats depression, OCD, anxiety
Aripiprazole
(Abilify)
"Antipsychotic" Dopamine & Serotonin
Receptor Partial Agonist
Modulates dopamine/serotonin—treats mania, depression, tics, irritability
Bupropion
(Wellbutrin)
"Antidepressant" Dopamine & Norepinephrine
Reuptake Inhibitor
Blocks dopamine/norepinephrine reuptake—treats depression, ADHD, smoking
Clonazepam
(Klonopin)
"Benzodiazepine" GABA
Receptor Positive Allosteric Modulator
Enhances GABA activity—treats anxiety, seizures, panic

Benefits of NbN

For Patients & Families:

For Clinicians:

For Researchers & Educators:


Real Clinical Examples

Example 1: ADHD Treatment

Old Way: "We're going to give your child a stimulant for ADHD."
Parent's Concern: "But my child is already too active! Why would you stimulate him more?"

NbN Way: "ADHD involves problems with dopamine and norepinephrine systems in the brain that control attention and impulse control. We'll use a medication that blocks dopamine and norepinephrine transporters, which helps these systems work better."
Result: Parent understands the mechanism and the logic.

Example 2: Anxiety with SSRIs

Old Way: "I'm prescribing an antidepressant for your child's separation anxiety."
Parent's Concern: "But she's not depressed—she has anxiety!"

NbN Way: "I'm prescribing a serotonin reuptake inhibitor. Serotonin is a brain chemical involved in both mood and anxiety. This medication helps the serotonin system work more effectively, which reduces anxiety."
Result: Clear explanation that matches the diagnosis.

Example 3: Tics with "Antipsychotics"

Old Way: "I'm recommending an antipsychotic for your son's tics."
Parent's Reaction: "ANTIPSYCHOTIC?! My son is NOT psychotic!"

NbN Way: "I'm recommending a dopamine receptor antagonist. Tics involve overactivity in dopamine pathways. This medication gently blocks dopamine receptors to reduce the tics."
Result: No stigma, accurate science, logical connection.


The NbN Apps: Free Resources

→ Free Mobile Apps Available

NbN App (General) - Includes 130+ psychotropic medications with:

  • Pharmacology domains & modes of action
  • Former terminology (for reference)
  • Approved indications (FDA, EMA)
  • Efficacy data (including off-label uses)
  • Side effects
  • Practical prescribing notes
  • Neurobiology & brain circuits

NbN-ca App (Child & Adolescent) - Pediatric-specific version includes:

  • 40+ most commonly used pediatric psychopharmacologic medications
  • Child-specific dosing information
  • Age-of-approval data by regulatory agencies
  • Developmental considerations

Download: Available for iOS and Android | Visit NbN website


Challenges & Considerations

Change Takes Time

Clinicians have used legacy nomenclature for decades. However, in clinical practice, the transition is easier than expected. Many discussions already reference neurotransmitter systems—NbN simply formalizes this approach.

Incomplete Knowledge

Our understanding of medication mechanisms remains incomplete. Lithium, for example, sits in its own category because its exact mechanism is uncertain. However, this is still better than lumping lithium with valproic acid and lamotrigine as "mood stabilizers" when their pharmacology is completely different.

Educational Adoption

NbN is already recognized by major journals, textbooks, and teaching programs. As more clinicians adopt it, the system will become standard practice.


Research & International Collaboration

The NbN system was developed by an international task force including:

Co-Authors on Dr. Sultan's JAACAP Publication:


Toronto Presentation (2018)

Dr. Sultan presented on Neuroscience-based Nomenclature at the Canadian Psychiatric Association (CPA) Continuing Professional Development Conference in Toronto (2018), sharing this revolutionary approach with Canadian psychiatrists and promoting international adoption.


Key Takeaways

✓ Traditional psychiatric medication names are outdated, confusing, and stigmatizing

✓ NbN classifies medications by pharmacology (11 domains, 10 modes of action)

✓ Benefits: Less stigma, better patient understanding, more accurate science

✓ Free apps available (NbN and NbN-ca) for prescribers

✓ Recognized by major journals, textbooks, and international organizations

✓ Empowers patients & families with accurate neuroscience-based education


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