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Antidepressant discontinuation
syndromes.
Haddad PM.
Cromwell House,
Mental Health Services of Salford, Eccles,
England.
Discontinuation symptoms are recognised with tricyclic
antidepressants, monoamine oxidase inhibitors, selective serotonin
reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs) and miscellaneous antidepressants. A wide
variety of symptoms have been described, differing somewhat between
antidepressant classes, and several symptom clusters or discontinuation
syndromes appear to exist. A common feature is onset within a few days
of stopping the antidepressant or, less commonly, reducing the dosage.
Discontinuation syndromes are clinically relevant as they are common,
can cause significant morbidity, can be misdiagnosed leading to
inappropriate treatment and can adversely effect future antidepressant
compliance. Preventative strategies include tapering antidepressants
prior to stoppage and educating patients and healthcare professionals to
ensure that antidepressants are taken consistently and not stopped
abruptly. Most reactions are mild and short-lived and require no
treatment other than patient reassurance. Severe cases can be treated
symptomatically or the antidepressant can be reinstated before being
gradually withdrawn. Reinstatement usually leads to symptom resolution
within 24 hours. Some individuals require very conservative tapering
schedules to prevent the re-emergence of symptoms. With SSRIs and
venlafaxine another strategy to consider is switching to fluoxetine,
which may suppress the discontinuation symptoms, but which has little
tendency to cause such symptoms itself. Neonatal discontinuation
symptoms can follow maternal use of antidepressants during pregnancy and
possibly breast feeding. The patient and doctor must take this into
consideration when making prescribing decisions. Discontinuation
symptoms have received little systematic study with the result that most
of the recommendations made here are based on anecdotal data or expert
opinion. Research is needed to provide a firm evidence base for future
recommendations.
Publication Types:
PMID: 11347722 [PubMed - indexed for
MEDLINE]
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