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      Antidepressants, withdrawal, and addiction; where are we now?

      1 , 2 , 3 , 4 , 3 , 5
      Journal of Psychopharmacology
      SAGE Publications

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          Addiction Is a Brain Disease, and It Matters

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            TEMPORARY REMOVAL: A systematic review into the incidence, severity and duration of antidepressant withdrawal effects: Are guidelines evidence-based?

            The U.K.'s current National Institute for Health and Care Excellence and the American Psychiatric Association's depression guidelines state that withdrawal reactions from antidepressants are 'self-limiting' (i.e. typically resolving between 1 and 2weeks). This systematic review assesses that claim.
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              Selective serotonin reuptake inhibitor discontinuation syndrome: a randomized clinical trial.

              Recent reports describe discontinuation-emergent adverse events upon cessation of selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors including dizziness, insomnia, nervousness, nausea, and agitation. We hypothesized that interruption of fluoxetine treatment would be associated with fewer discontinuation-emergent adverse events than interruption of sertraline or paroxetine treatment, based on fluoxetine's longer half-life. In this 4-week study, 242 patients with remitted depression receiving maintenance therapy with open-label fluoxetine, sertraline, or paroxetine for 4-24 months had their maintenance therapy interrupted with double-blind placebo substitution for 5-8 days. The Symptom Questionnaire (SQ), the Discontinuation-Emergent Signs and Symptoms checklist, the 28-item Hamilton Depression Rating Scale, and the Montgomery-Asberg Depression Rating Scale were used to assess somatic distress and stability of antidepressant response. Two hundred twenty patients (91%) completed the study. Following interruption of therapy, fluoxetine-treated patients experienced fewer discontinuation-emergent events than either sertraline-treated or paroxetine-treated patients (p < .001). The mean SQ somatic symptom scale score in fluoxetine-treated patients was significantly lower than that in sertraline-treated and paroxetine-treated patients (p < .001). Fluoxetine-treated patients also experienced less reemergence of depressive symptoms than sertraline-treated or paroxetine-treated patients (p < .001). Abrupt interruption of antidepressant therapy for 5-8 days was associated with the emergence of new somatic and psychological symptoms in patients treated with paroxetine and to a lesser degree sertraline, with few symptoms seen with fluoxetine.
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                Author and article information

                Contributors
                (View ORCID Profile)
                Journal
                Journal of Psychopharmacology
                J Psychopharmacol
                SAGE Publications
                0269-8811
                1461-7285
                February 21 2019
                June 2019
                May 21 2019
                June 2019
                : 33
                : 6
                : 655-659
                Affiliations
                [1 ]Department of Psychological Medicine, King’s College London, London, UK
                [2 ]Division of Psychiatry, University College, London, UK
                [3 ]Department of Psychiatry, University of Oxford, Oxford, UK
                [4 ]Clinical and Experimental Sciences, University of Southampton, Southampton, UK
                [5 ]Imperial College London, London, UK
                Article
                10.1177/0269881119845799
                31111764
                f8288b1d-2b6a-422f-9ada-81fb753c7843
                © 2019

                http://journals.sagepub.com/page/policies/text-and-data-mining-license

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