Antidepressants and the serotonin syndrome in general practice
- PMID: 10818650
- PMCID: PMC1313555
Antidepressants and the serotonin syndrome in general practice
Abstract
Background: As a consequence of the greater use of agents affecting the serotonergic system, a syndrome of serotonin hyperstimulation has been recognized more frequently. The serotonin syndrome is characterized by a constellation of symptoms that include mental status changes, agitation, myoclonus, hyperreflexia, sweating, shivering, tremor, diarrhoea, lack of coordination, and fever. Deaths have been reported.
Aim: To identify cases of the serotonin syndrome among patients prescribed a new antidepressant in general practice, and to determine doctors' awareness of the syndrome.
Method: Patients who were dispensed nefazodone in England between 1996 and 1997 were identified using dispensed prescription data. Prescribing doctors were sent questionnaires as part of a post-marketing surveillance study. Patients reported to have experienced two or more features of the serotonin syndrome were identified, and specific questionnaires were sent to their general practitioners.
Results: There was a 96.2% return rate of serotonin syndrome questionnaires. Nineteen cases met criteria for the syndrome (incidence = 0.4 cases per 1000 patient-months of treatment with nefazodone). Eight patients developed symptoms while taking nefazodone alone. Serotonergic symptoms were reported to a similar degree with five other antidepressants studied by the same method. In total, 85.4% of responding general practitioners were unaware of the serotonin syndrome.
Conclusion: Improved awareness of the syndrome is needed within general practice. There is a need to distinguish the relatively minor serotonergic symptoms from those of a severe, life-threatening serotonin syndrome.
Comment in
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Serotonin syndrome: potentially fatal but difficult to recognize.Br J Gen Pract. 1999 Nov;49(448):867-8. Br J Gen Pract. 1999. PMID: 10818648 Free PMC article. No abstract available.
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