There is a consensus that ADs can rtaise a clients energy before their mood which is why suicide and aggression can increase in the early stages of medication. |
'Antidepressants
increase suicidal thoughts in under-25s'
Wednesday
12 August 2009
Young
adults under the age of 25 suffer an increased risk of suicide or suicidal
thoughts when they take antidepressants and the risk is greatest after they
take the drugs for anxiety and other mental problems not connected with
depression, a study has found.
The
same research concluded that antidepressants had a small but noticeable effect
on protecting older people against suicide. However, the increased suicide risk
to the under-25s was similar to that already seen in children and adolescents
taking the drugs, scientists said.
Marc
Stone, medical officer of the centre for drug evaluation and research at the US
Food and Drug Administration (FDA) in Silver Spring, Maryland, said: "It
doesn't mean that these drugs shouldn't be given to young adults but you have
to think about the risks and the benefits. The findings tell you to watch
people carefully. If someone on antidepressants talks of being suicidal, it may
actually be due to the drugs."
When
the scientists looked at the risks of suicide, attempted suicide or suicidal
thoughts in the adult population as a whole they did not find any link between
the use of antidepressants and an increased suicidal risk. But when they broke
the data down into different age groups, a pattern emerged.
The
study investigated previous clinical trials involving 12 antidepressants from
eight different drug manufacturers, including older tricyclic antidepressants,
as well as the newer selective serotonin re-uptake inhibitors, such as Prozac
made by Eli Lilly, and Seroxat made by GlaxoSmithKline, which was prescribed to
about 400,000 Britons last year.
In
the cases of nearly 100,000 patients who were randomly given either an
antidepressant or a harmless dummy pill and questioned about their suicidal
thoughts or behaviour, there were eight suicides, 134 suicide attempts, 10
patients who had prepared for suicide without actually attempting it and 378
patients who had admitted to thoughts about suicide but had not acted on them.
The study is published online in the British Medical Journal today although the
findings were originally released by the FDA two years ago.
Professor
John Geddes, an epidemiological psychiatrist at Oxford University, said it is
important that patients taking antidepressants continued with their medication.
The
Medicines Healthcare Products Regulatory Agency advises that patients taking
SSRIs and related antidepressants, particularly young adults, should be
carefully monitored during treatment for any worsening of symptoms or suicidal
behaviour, a spokeswoman said.
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