Mood Stabilizers & Antipsychotics3 min read

Abilify (Aripiprazole)

Khaled Hamed, PMHNP-C

Written Apr 10, 2026 · Updated Jun 24, 2026

Medically reviewed by: Khaled Hamed, PMHNP-C

You have been taking an antidepressant like Zoloft or Lexapro for a few months. You feel better, but you don't feel well. The crushing despair might be gone, but the heavy fatigue and lack of motivation are still dragging you down.

During our psychiatric evaluation, I might suggest adding a small dose of a medication called Abilify (Aripiprazole) to your regimen. Many patients go to the pharmacy, read the label, and immediately panic because Abilify is classified as an "Atypical Antipsychotic." They think, "Wait, I'm just depressed, I'm not psychotic!"

As a Psychiatric-Mental Health Nurse Practitioner, I want to demystify this powerful medication. When used at low doses, Abilify is not treating psychosis - it is acting as an incredible "booster" for your antidepressant.

The Smart Thermostat: How Abilify Works

Abilify works differently than almost any other psychiatric medication. To understand it, we have to look at dopamine, the chemical responsible for motivation and reward.

Most medications either completely block dopamine or force the brain to make more. Abilify is unique because it is a Partial Dopamine Agonist. This means it acts like a smart thermostat for your brain:

  • If your dopamine levels are too high (which causes mania or psychosis), Abilify cools them down and blocks the excess.
  • If your dopamine levels are too low (which causes the heavy, unmotivated fatigue of severe depression), Abilify stimulates the receptors to bring the levels back up to normal.

What Does Abilify Treat?

Because of this "thermostat" mechanism, Abilify is FDA-approved for several different conditions, depending heavily on the dose prescribed:

  • Adjunctive Treatment for Major Depressive Disorder: At very low doses (usually 2mg to 5mg), it acts as a booster. It is prescribed alongside your standard SSRI to push you out of treatment-resistant depression.
  • Bipolar I Disorder: At moderate doses, it serves as a highly effective mood stabilizer, particularly for preventing manic episodes.
  • Schizophrenia: At higher doses (10mg to 30mg), it fulfills its traditional role as an antipsychotic.

"Don't let the medical classification scare you. In psychiatry, how a medication works for you depends entirely on the dose."

Side Effects and The "Restless" Feeling

Abilify is generally well-tolerated, and it has a lower risk of causing severe weight gain or heavy sedation compared to older atypical antipsychotics (like Seroquel or Zyprexa). However, there is one specific side effect we monitor for very closely:

Akathisia: This is a physical feeling of intense inner restlessness. Patients describe it as an overwhelming urge to move their legs, pace the room, or a feeling like they "want to jump out of their own skin." If you experience this, you must tell your provider. We can usually fix it quickly by lowering the dose or prescribing a secondary medication (like Propranolol) to calm the nervous system.

Break Through Treatment-Resistant Depression

If you have tried multiple antidepressants and still feel stuck in the dark, it might be time for an augmentation strategy. You deserve to feel fully well, not just "less bad."

  • 📋 Advanced Pharmacology: Let's evaluate if an adjunctive medication like Abilify can give your current treatment the boost it needs.
  • 📅 Secure Telehealth: I offer thorough psychiatric evaluations and advanced medication management.

Schedule Your Medication Review

Khaled Hamed, MSN, PMHNP-C

Psychiatric Mental Health Nurse Practitioner

Providing evidence-based, compassionate telehealth psychiatric care.

Related reading

Frequently asked questions

What is Abilify (aripiprazole) used for?

An atypical antipsychotic approved for schizophrenia, manic episodes in bipolar disorder, as an add-on for depression, and for irritability in autism.

How does aripiprazole work?

It acts as a partial agonist at dopamine and certain serotonin receptors, helping to balance dopamine signaling rather than fully blocking it.

What are the common side effects of aripiprazole?

Restlessness or an urge to keep moving (akathisia), nausea, trouble sleeping, and sometimes drowsiness. It's less likely than some antipsychotics to cause weight gain or heavy sedation.

Does aripiprazole cause weight gain?

It tends to affect weight and metabolism less than several other antipsychotics, though a clinician still monitors metabolic health. The focus is overall health, tracked over time.

What serious effects should I know about?

Rarely, antipsychotics can cause a serious reaction called neuroleptic malignant syndrome (high fever, muscle rigidity, confusion) - seek emergency care. There's also a boxed warning of increased risk in older adults with dementia-related psychosis.

Can I stop aripiprazole suddenly?

No - stopping an antipsychotic abruptly can destabilize the condition it treats. Any change should be made with your prescriber.

References

  1. Gettu N, Saadabadi A. Aripiprazole. StatPearls (NCBI Bookshelf) - indications, mechanism (dopamine partial agonist), adverse effects.
  2. Chokhawala KP, Stevens L. Antipsychotic Medications. StatPearls (NCBI Bookshelf) - first- vs second-generation antipsychotics, side effects, and monitoring.
  3. McIntyre RS, et al. Psychotropic Drug-Related Weight Gain and Its Treatment - differential metabolic liability across antipsychotics. American Journal of Psychiatry. 2024.
  4. Aripiprazole. MedlinePlus drug information (US National Library of Medicine) - patient medication overview.

Medical disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice. It does not establish a provider–patient relationship. Always consult a qualified healthcare provider for diagnosis and treatment.