Many people feel safe in that their depression or anxiety is continuously managed by medication.
However, these are mind-altering drugs and were never intended as a permanent solution.
In a recent study from Midwestern University Chicago, researchers say that people who have taken antidepressants for years should consider coming off the medication.
But often these people will likely face difficult and even dangerous withdrawal symptoms due to physical dependence.
The researchers suggest once the patient’s depression or anxiety has been resolved, the physician should guide them toward discontinuation, while providing non-pharmacologic treatments to help them maintain their mental health.
The best process is to follow a tapering schedule while consulting with a physician. Stopping medication outright is almost never advisable.
The study is published in The Journal of the American Osteopathic Association. The lead author is Mireille Rizkalla, Ph.D., Assistant Professor, Department of Clinical Integration.
In the study, the team found patients who stop taking their medication often experience Antidepressant Discontinuation Syndrome (ADS), which includes flu-like symptoms, insomnia, nausea, imbalance, sensory disturbances often described as electric shocks or “brain zaps”, and hyperarousal.
Older, first-generation antidepressants often come with additional risks for more severe symptoms, including aggressiveness, catatonia, cognitive impairment, and psychosis.
Discontinuing any antidepressant also carries a risk for gradual worsening or relapsing of depression and anxiety, as well as suicidal thoughts.
A recent report from the CDC said a quarter of people taking antidepressants had been using them for a decade or more.
The team says this data makes the case that patients and physicians are overly reliant on medication without concern for long-term consequences.
While relatively safe, antidepressants still carry side effects, including weight gain, sexual dysfunction and emotional numbing.
The team also urges caution as the evidence for antidepressant risk factors is based on short-term usage and says there are no sufficient longitudinal studies on the neurologic impact of taking antidepressants for decades.
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