When Depression Gets Worse on an Antidepressant
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Bupropion and restless legs syndrome: a randomized controlled trialWhen a patient complains that their mood got worse on an antidepressant, it doesn’t necessarily mean they are sensitive to medications. In this episode, we detail 6 other reasons why depression can get worse on an antidepressant. Published On: 2/15/21 Duration: 22 minutes, 42 seconds Article Referenced: “Are SSRIs Associated With Increased Rates of Violence?” The Carlat Psychiatry Report, February 2021 Transcript: When depression gets worse on an antidepressant, it doesn’t necessarily mean the patient has bipolar disorder or that they are sensitive to medications. Today, we detail 7 explanations for this paradoxical phenomena. Welcome to the Carlat Psychiatry Podcast, keeping psychiatry honest since 2003. I’m Chris Aiken, the editor in chief of the Carlat Report. And I’m Kellie Newsome, a psychiatric NP and a dedicated reader of every issue. KELLIE NEWSOME: This month we featured a new study on an old controversy: Can antidepressants cause violence? The study is the best designed one we’ve seen to tackle this question, which dates back to the early 1990’s when case reports were described on fluoxetine. The idea goes against the grain of practice, where SSRIs are used to treat anger and aggression due to conditions like personality disorders and intermittent explosive disorder. But it reminded us of another issue – one that we see a lot more often in clinical practice – can antidepressants make depression worse? This is the kind of problem that – even if it’s rare – you’re likely to encounter in psychiatric practice because the majority – 80% – of antidepressants are prescribed in primary care. The ones that get better are not likely to come to our doors, but the ones who don’t respond or get worse will. 1. Side Effects KELLIE NEWSOME: How can serotonergic antidepressants cause akathisia? I thought it was due to dopamine blockade? KELLIE NEWSOME: And while we’re on the subject, sleep disruption is another reason that antidepressants can make people feel worse. Bupropion often gets a bad rep here because it’s thought to be an activating antidepressant, but it actually causes initiation insomnia at about the same rate as SSRIs. On the other hand, the SSRIs tend to lighten sleep, making sleep more restless, while bupropion tends to deepen sleep quality. And if your patient has poor sleep quality, they may not complain of it directly – they may just say that they are tired, can’t concentrate, and are easily frustrated and can’t manage stress. The antidepressants that are pretty favorable when it comes to sleep quality are three that have sedating effects: And three that are relatively non-sedating: So, Dr. Aiken, once you’ve ruled out side effects and sleep problems, what else goes through your mind when a patient tells you they feel more depressed on an antidepressant? 2. Bipolar Disorder KELLIE NEWSOME: So does that mean it’s safe to give an antidepressant as long as they are on a mood stabilizer? KELLIE NEWSOME: But aren’t there studies where antidepressants treat bipolar depression? KELLIE NEWSOME: That makes sense because mixed states are more severe than depression – they have higher rates of suicide, substance abuse, and psychiatric hospitalization. 3. Bipolar Features: Depression with mixed features and short duration hypomania KELLIE NEWSOME: Most of the patients I see in practice who have mixed features are already taking an antidepressant. KELLIE NEWSOME: We covered this in our January 2018 issue, which has a link to the Bipolarity Index. This is a validated rating scale that uses non-symptomatic markers of bipolar – like age of onset, treatment response, and family history – to assess the likelihood that a patient has bipolar disorder on a 100-point scale. It’s particularly helpful when faced with mixed features, because the symptoms are so hard to identify – they can look like anxiety, PTSD, or even ADHD. KELLIE NEWSOME: Another area where we see this is short duration hypomania. About 1 in 20 patients with recurrent depression have brief hypomanias that are classic and recurrent but never last long enough to meet DSM criteria for bipolar – they last less than 4 days. Jules Angst published a remarkable study where he showed the chance mood worsening on an antidepressant rises steadily with the duration of hypomania – from 1% in patients with no history of hypomania, to 9% if they’ve had it for less than a day, 14% for 2-3 days, and then we get into the real bipolar levels – 4 days – the cut off for bipolar II – the risk is 27% – and if they’ve ever had hypomania for more than a week the risk of getting worse on an antidepressant is 38%. But, still, that’s only 38% – it’s not 100% – none of this is absolute. Risk of antidepressant-induced manic symptoms rises with 4. Borderline Personality Disorder KELLIE NEWSOME: Another reason that patients can get worse on antidepressants is borderline personality disorder. And this isn’t just because there’s a lot of symptom overlap with bipolar. Borderline personality itself has been identified as a predictor of antidepressant worsening, and patients with borderline personality tend to get worse – more depressed or more aggressive – on tricyclics – for example there are two studies showing this effect with amitriptyline. On the other hand, there are studies where some borderline symptoms improved on antidepressants – particularly SSRIs – so this is not an absolute, but keep in mind those studies all had flaws – enough that the evidence for SSRIs in borderline was considered too inadequate to recommend them in several recent reviews. 5. Age Under 25 KELLIE NEWSOME: So how common is this problem? In terms of how common it is, about 1 in 100 children will develop suicidality due to an antidepressant – actually the rate is 3% on antidepressant and 2% on placebo. Sometimes you’ll see this in practice as intrusive suicidal thoughts, but more often it’s part of a bigger picture of mood worsening that may include anxiety, insomnia, or aggressive behaviors. In 2016 the Cochrane group published an analysis of 70 trials of SSRIs and SNRIs, and they concluded that these medications doubled the risk of suicidality and aggression in children but not adults. KELLIE NEWSOME: And do we know anything else about which children are at risk? KELLIE NEWSOME: So far we’ve covered 5 reasons why mood can get worse on an antidepressant: 6. Genetics And now for #6: Genetics. Some research suggests that patients with the short arm of the serotonin transporter gene – the S/S genotype on SERT – are more likely to develop mania, and possibly suicidality or just more side effects on a serotonergic antidepressant. This is by no means definitive, but then again, neither are any of the other risks we mentioned in this podcast. This is about risk factors, not absolutes. 7. Medication Sensitivity And #7: Some patients are just more sensitive to medications overall. Maybe they have an anxiety disorder, or hypochondriasis, or maybe they are a slow metabolizer and get really high levels of the med. KELLIE NEWSOME: So think carefully about these other possibilities before concluding that the patient is med-sensitive. That term doesn’t tell us very much, other than to keep trying with antidepressants with lower and slower doses. Dysphoric And now for the word of the day…. Dysphoric KELLIE NEWSOME: Dysphoric comes from the Greek for “Distress that is hard to bear.” It is a profound state of unease or dissatisfaction. Dysphoria is a symptom that is not tied to any specific disorder in psychiatry – it’s been used in premenstrual dysphoria, gender dysphoria, and in mood disorders it is often used to describe mixed states or depressive “dysphoric” mania. This seems fitting, as mania is an unsatisfied state of mind – that is why people with mania do things to excess – nothing satisfies them. So while a depressed patient may delay seeking help for months or weeks because of hopelessness and low motivation, a dysphoric patient is likely to call for urgent relief. The late Athanasios Koukopoulos (a-tha-na-sios cou-kop-olis), who studied mixed states throughout his 50 year career, described it this way: “The patient complains of anxiety, inner tension, irritability, anger, despair, suicidal impulses, crowded or racing thoughts, rumination, and insomnia.” Got feedback? Take the podcast survey.
the duration of past hypomanic episodes
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