Schizophrenia is a CNS pathology first described over one century ago. Since that time many discoveries have been done, but still several pathophysiology details are unclear, however, the dopamine hypothesis, emerged forty years ago, still remain one of the main possibility. Since the discovery of chlorpromazine the antipsychotic drugs have been the treatment of choice for schizophrenia and their activity appears to be accounted to the high affinity and antagonistic activity at D2 receptors. However, they are responsible of severe side effects mainly related to the dopamine receptor antagonistic activity itself. A newer approach seems to be represented by the use of D2-like receptor partial agonists. Drugs with such a mechanism of action co...