ChemicallyEnhanced
Bluelighter
For contrast, citralopam did nothing whatsoever if I took it or if I didn't take it. In that case evergreening HAS taken place as, behold, escitalopram.
I have a feeling that the NHS were able to buy citralopram directly from Lundbeck at a very low price because for a few years it became the first-line medication for unipolar depression in the UK. I suspect GPs soon recognized that it wasn't very good - even some of the human studies showed it to be no better than a placebo.
Just to be clear, the placebo effect is real and why some people swear by altentative medicine - if you BELIEVE a treatment will work, it will work (at least sometimes) and for a mental health condition, I suppose it's easier to think yourself better than, say porphyria, cancer or indeed a broken leg.
I still think if a person is not suicial, tricyclics are more effective. When Prozac arrived I looked at the human studies and noted that they had compared the highest prescribable dose of fluoxetine with the lowest dose of amitriptyline indicated for unipolar depression and the conclusion was that the two medicines were of similar utility. While I can see the theoretical lower risk of intentional overdose most SSRIs offer, we live in a world where medicines can be delivered for a nominal price so a cautious clinician could insist on the tricyclic being dispensed on a weekly basis.
With any medicine, there will always be a risk/benefit ratio and I note SSRIs are associated with INCREASED risk of suicide among some demographics. Yes, taking a whole box of your antidepressant won't kill you but we are surrounded by effective ways to throw a seven.
For those concerned about stopping, the BNF at least DOES advise that SSRIs should be tapered rather than abrupty stopped. Given that all SSRIs have long (or very long) half-lives, how the taper is undertaken can include taking a dose every other day. It does seem complicated and the only good thing I have to fay about fluoxetine is that it's half-life is 4-6 DAYS. I suspect discontinuation syndrome took a while to be accepted because when Prozac was almost a national institution, that extreme duration likely meant discontinuation wasn't as problematic.
I was prescribed Citalopram first. I took ONE pill....never again. My anxiety - already "severe" was so much worse than it was essentially a panic attack that lasted for like 20 hours.
