
Antidepressant Medication Side Effects
Antidepressants may cause mild and, usually, temporary side effects (sometimes referred to as adverse effects) in some people. Typically these are annoying, but not serious. However, any unusual reactions or side effects or those that interfere with functioning should be reported to the doctor immediately. The most common side effects of tricyclic antidepressants, and ways to deal with them, are:
* Dry mouthit is helpful to drink sips of water; chew sugarless gum; clean teeth daily.
* Constipation bran cereals, prunes, fruit, and vegetables should be in the diet.
* Bladder problems emptying the bladder may be troublesome, and the urine stream may not be as strong as usual; the doctor should be notified if there is marked difficulty or pain.
* Sexual problems sexual functioning may change; if worrisome, it should be discussed with the doctor.
* Blurred vision this will pass soon and will not usually necessitate new glasses.
* Dizziness rising from the bed or chair slowly is helpful.
* Drowsiness as a daytime problem this usually passes soon. A person feeling drowsy or sedated should not drive or operate heavy equipment. The more sedating antidepressants are generally taken at bedtime to help sleep and minimize daytime drowsiness.
The newer antidepressants have different types of side effects:
* Headache this will usually go away.
* Nausea this is also temporary, but even when it occurs, it is transient after each dose.
* Nervousness and insomnia (trouble falling asleep or waking often during the night) these may occur during the first few weeks; dosage reductions or time will usually resolve them.
* Agitation (feeling jittery) if this happens for the first time after the drug is taken and is more than transient, the doctor should be notified.
* Sexual problems the doctor should be consulted if the problem is persistent or worrisome.
"About 9 million Americans of all ages are living with a current or past diagnosis of cancer and people who face a cancer diagnosis will experience many stresses and emotional upheavals."
NYC; It's Not the Stress, It's How You Deal With It As a new study on stress is released, here is a look at how a few New Yorkers deal with it all. What's Wrong With a Child? Psychiatrists Often Disagree
Increasing numbers of children are being treated for psychiatric problems, but naming those problems remains more an art than a science. Can't Keep From Shopping? Help Could Be on the Way In its extreme forms compulsive buying may be a psychiatric illness an impulse control disorder associated with abnormal levels of depression and anxiety. Rockets Fray Nerves in Israeli 'Bull's-Eye' City After seven years of rocket fire, sometimes sporadic and sometimes intense, Sderot, a working-class Israeli town, has turned into a city of fear.
"The depressed person needs diversion and company, but too many demands can increase feelings of failure."
|