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A Painful
Withdrawal |
20/20 Friday, Aug. 25, 2000 (This is an unedited, uncorrected transcript.) Prepared by Burrelle’s Information Services,
which takes sole responsibility for accuracy of transcription.
CONNIE CHUNG, ABCNEWS Good evening and welcome to 20/20
FRIDAY. We begin with a story you must not miss if you or people you care
about are taking anti-depressants. There are growing indications that for
some people getting off many of the most popular of these drugs can be a
nightmare. While these drugs can be a lifesaver, the experts say many
unsuspecting people may face some kind of withdrawal symptoms. Tonight,
Dr. Nancy Snyderman introduces us to some patients who were feeling so
good they thought it was time to give up their anti-depressants. They say
they weren’t prepared for what would happen next.
DR NANCY SNYDERMAN, ABCNEWS (VO) Like many of us, 27-year-old
Melissa Hall was taught to listen to her doctors, trust the medical advice
that was supposed to keep her healthy. But she says all that changed when
she was prescribed an SSRI, selective serotonin reuptake inhibitor, a
widely used anti-depressant called Paxil.
MELISSA HALL One of the reasons my doctor suggested the Paxil
was because he had said it didn’t have as many side effects when starting
on it. So it was great for people that got panic attacks.
NANCY SNYDERMAN (VO) That was about a year ago, when Melissa
says her overactive thyroid began to trigger the horrible panic attacks.
The Paxil worked, stopping the attacks. But when it came time for Melissa
to stop taking the Paxil, that’s when she says a new nightmare began.
MELISSA HALL Well, the first time I got off it, I got really
sick. So I called my doctor and said, ‘Look, I’m getting dizzy, I’m having
these symptoms. So she had suggested that it causes some withdrawal and to
get back on it and to wean off of it for about a week.
NANCY SNYDERMAN (VO) She went back on the Paxil and tapered off
over a period of a week, then stopped, just as instructed. But this time
Melissa says her symptoms got even worse, with severe dizziness, nausea,
and electric shock sensations in her head, leaving her virtually
incapacitated. Melissa then contacted another of her doctors, who said to
resume taking the Paxil, but to wean off of it even slower. MELISSA HALL I did it over a month and a half.
NANCY SNYDERMAN (VO) But as the dose got smaller and smaller,
Melissa says she became increasingly ill. She even called doctors out of
the phone book. She said none of them had heard of her symptoms.
Desperate, Melissa turned to the Internet.
MELISSA HALL I just got on the Internet and typed in Paxil
withdrawal. And once I did that, I found just hundreds of sites of people
having the same exact symptoms that I was having.
NANCY SNYDERMAN (VO) We, too, found hundreds of postings on the
Internet, people begging for help, wondering what was wrong with them,
many whose doctors didn’t believe Paxil could be the cause of their
symptoms. SHARI LOBACK I was so dizzy and sick. And sometimes I would get
out of bed and I would just collapse because I couldn’t get up.
NANCY SNYDERMAN (VO) Shari was prescribed Paxil for chronic
headaches by her neurologist, who she says never warned her about problems
associated with getting off the drug. SHARI LOBACK Oh, my God. This is me and nobody ever knew it.
Nobody ever suggested that it was the Paxil.
NANCY SNYDERMAN The severity of their symptoms made both Ted and
Kelly question their sanity, which experts call a potentially dangerous
state of mind for people who’ve been prescribed Paxil for depression.
KELLY OWEN (ph) It’s like your brain is attached to your
eyeballs. And if your eyeballs look one way, your brain has to catch up.
It’s like you can feel the fluid in you head that’s around your brain. I
know that sounds crazy, but that is—that was the major issue with me. That
increasingly got worse until I could not take it anymore.
TED ANDERSON I went through about three or four weeks of just
the most agonizing flu-like symptoms. I had trouble with my vision. There
wasn’t much I didn’t have trouble with.
NANCY SNYDERMAN (VO) The product insert for Paxil includes this
mention of withdrawal syndrome, which it describes as rare. It also says
there have been reports that “abrupt discontinuation may lead to symptoms
such as dizziness, sensory disturbances, agitation or anxiety, nausea and
sweating.” But critics say patients often aren’t given a clear enough
picture of just how slowly they may have to wean themselves from the drug.
ROBERT HEDAYA Well, it’s a big problem. It’s a real problem. I
think these patients’ complaints about withdrawal difficulties are real.
There’s no question.
NANCY SNYDERMAN (VO) Psychopharmacologist Robert Hedaya,
Georgetown University professor and author of “The Antidepressant Survival
Program,” has become increasingly concerned about what he believes is the
indiscriminant use of anti-depressants and the lack of sufficient
information given to patients.
ROBERT HEDAYA I remember getting three emergency phone calls one
Saturday a few years ago after another anti-depressant just came
out—patients who were coming off of it pretty rapidly. And they started to
complain, all three of them in one day, of electric shock sensations in
their head. Not reported in the literature, not in the product
information, but it’s real.
NANCY SNYDERMAN Experts say it’s not just Paxil. There have been
reports of withdrawal symptoms with many of today’s most popular
anti-depressants. Why? Well, one factor is something called the drugs
half-life—how long the medicine stays in your body. Paxil has one of the
shortest half-lives, which means once you stop taking the drug, or even
miss a dose, it washes out of the body so quickly that it can cause a jolt
to the nervous system. In contrast, Prozac remains in the system longer,
and is therefore less likely to cause severe withdrawal symptoms.
ROBERT HEDAYA You’re not as likely to get the quick withdrawal
symptoms, but you will get symptoms of withdrawal from virtually any
anti-depressant.
DR DAVID WHEADON What we have seen in terms of the anecdotal
reports is that it happens very rarely.
NANCY SNYDERMAN (VO) Dr. David Wheadon is vice president of
regulatory affairs at SmithKline Beecham, the maker of Paxil. He says
withdrawal, or as SmithKline Beecham prefers to call it, discontinuation
syndrome, occurs in only 2 out of every 1,000 patients who are
discontinued appropriately. Even then he says the symptoms are mild and
short-lived. What do you mean by discontinued appropriately?
DAVID WHEADON Well, first of all, first and foremost, it’s
important that patients not stop their medications without the
consultation of their treating physician. Secondly, for some patients you
can stop at the lowest dose with the consultation of the physician.
There’s no adverse sequelae. For others, sometimes you have to go to a
more slow decrease in terms of either the dose, if you’re at a higher
doses of these drugs, or in some cases you can also do an alternate day
dosing.
THOMAS MOORE Well, tapering off anti-depressant drugs, everyone
should—I mean, that should be a rule for everyone who takes them.
NANCY SNYDERMAN (VO) Thomas Moore (ph), a health policy analyst
at George Washington University, says while it’s true that everyone can
eventually be weaned off Paxil and other anti-depressants, in some it can
be a very difficult process, even excruciating. The problem, he says, is
that no one knows why withdrawal affects some people more than others.
THOMAS MOORE Some of them seem to have more side effects,
withdrawal effects than others. And in many people, they can be a passing
problem. It can be, you know, episodes of flu-like symptoms, nausea,
anxiety, inability to sleep. In other people, it can be a very severe
problem that requires regular medical attention and can take months to
resolve.
NANCY SNYDERMAN As the dose decreased, how did you feel?
SHARI LOBACK Worse. I was just getting progressively worse as I
was taking less and less of it.
NANCY SNYDERMAN You say it happens in a few patients, but we see
estimates of up to 50 percent of people having trouble coming off these
medications. So a much higher figure.
DAVID WHEADON Well, I’ve not seen that figure, quite frankly.
NANCY SNYDERMAN But because there are so few studies, experts
say it’s difficult to know how many people really suffer from withdrawal.
And there may be another cause for concern. Some estimate that 70 percent
of prescriptions for SSRIs are written not by psychiatrists, but by
primary care doctors, in large part due to managed care and the difficulty
in getting psychiatric services. And because of this, critics say that
primary care doctors often misdiagnose patients, putting them through
costly tests and giving them unnecessary medications. DIANE FISCHER She was depressed. She couldn’t get out of bed.
Every day when I called her, it seemed like it was the day would be worse
than the one before to the point where I was so concerned about her that I
literally thought something was deathly wrong with here. I literally had
to take her to the doctor myself and said, ‘Look, this is not my girl.
Something’s going on.’ And still we couldn’t get any answers what was
happening to her.
NANCY SNYDERMAN What do you say to the hundreds of people trying
to network on the Internet with complaints that they can’t get off these
medications? They’re having problems with withdrawal. And they’re seeking
out help from each other.
DAVID WHEADON It is important that patients that are being
treated for depression, panic disorder, other psychiatric illnesses, seek
advice, seek counsel from the appropriate source. I think sometimes people
get a bit confused about symptoms of the illness that may be coming back,
as opposed to effects of discontinuing SSRIs.
NANCY SNYDERMAN But for many people, these are not symptoms they
had before, whether it’s anxiety disorder or depression, these are
symptoms they describe as being worse than the original problem.
DAVID WHEADON But as you know, with psychiatric illnesses,
they’re recurring. And the fact that you may in your first episode have
certain sets of symptoms does not guarantee that when that episode or when
that illness recurs, you’ll have the same sort of symptoms.
NANCY SNYDERMAN (VO) But some say this attitude of blaming the
depression for these side effects can lead to trouble. In fact,
researchers at Massachusetts General Hospital in Boston found that
“symptoms of discontinuation may be mistaken for physical illness or
relapse into depression.” This can lead doctors to tell patients like
Kelly they still need their anti-depressants. But Kelly believed her
symptoms weren’t from the depression, and once again began to wean herself
off the Paxil, this time even more slowly. But, again, she became so sick
that she begged a friend to take her to the emergency room. She says the
doctor diagnosed her as having an inner ear infection and told her that
stopping the Paxil couldn’t make her so sick.
KELLY OWEN I told him, ‘I’ll make a deal with you. Give me one
pill, or just give me one prescription. If I take the medicine and this
feeling doesn’t go away, I will come back in and I will let you examine
me.’ And he said all right.
NANCY SNYDERMAN (VO) Within hours after taking the Paxil, Kelly
says she was totally back to normal.
1ST WOMAN I could eat. I could sleep. I could walk around. I
could drive. I could do whatever I wanted.
NANCY SNYDERMAN (VO) Eventually, Melissa and Shari did succeed
in getting off the Paxil and are not taking any anti-depressants. But
Kelly, who had a relapse of her depression, and Ted, have taken an
intermediate route, switching to other anti-depressants with the hope that
one day they will be easier to quit.
2ND WOMAN I mean, depression is a horrible thing. I wouldn’t
wish it on anyone. It is worse than any physical pain, I think, you can go
through. It is absolutely horrible. But when you—you’re feeling better and
you’re ready to get off of medicine and you can’t, that is a problem.
CONNIE CHUNG So, Nancy, should people worry about taking these
drugs?
NANCY SNYDERMAN Connie, these medications have helped countless
numbers of people including the people you met in this story. And many do
not experience withdrawal.
CONNIE CHUNG So let’s go over this. If you want to get off
anti-depressants, what should you do?
NANCY SNYDERMAN First of all, do not make a move without your
doctor knowing. And find a doctor who has some experience with this
problem. And then be prepared for the fact that it may take a while to
wean yourself.
CONNIE CHUNG You know, I would think that the doctor who
prescribed the medicine would know about withdrawal.
NANCY SNYDERMAN Well, you would hope so. But, unfortunately, a
lot of doctors do not know about this problem. So if you’re not getting
the care and guidance or your doctor doesn’t really seem to get a grip on
your symptoms, get a second opinion. And remember, this is not just Paxil
we’re talking about. Every anti-depressant on the market can have problems
like these. So if you think this fits you, ask for help.
CONNIE CHUNG All right, thank you, Dr. Nancy Snyderman. For more
information and tips, go to our Web site at 2020.abcnews.com. We’ll be
right back.
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