Paranoia/Racing Thoughts Effexor 02/11/1997 Massachusetts Woman Has Adverse Reaction to Med Summary:

Second and third paragraphs read [in part]:  " About a month after I began taking Effexor, I experienced sleeplessness and racing thoughts. This soon turned into paranoia, confusion, and suicidal thoughts, as a result of feeling that I had gone insane I think the near suicide could have been avoided if my former psychiatrist had explained to me that mania is a relatively common result of selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors."


UNFAIR DIAGNOSES
Boston Globe
November 2, 1997
Estimated printed pages: 1
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Karen Avenoso wonders what happens when a patient on antidepressants becomes manic or suicidal. Will he make the connection between the drug and the symptom?

In my case, the answer was no. About a month after I began taking Effexor, I experienced sleeplessness and racing thoughts. This soon turned into paranoia, confusion, and suicidal thoughts, as a result of feeling that I had gone insane
I think the near suicide could have been avoided if my former psychiatrist had explained to me that mania is a relatively common result of selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors. Indeed, I found out later (in the hospital) that it happens in more than 10 percent of patients who take them.

Why then the silence on the subject? Avenoso, for all her research, gives it only one sentence, which appears on the last page of the article. Perhaps the psychiatrists she interviewed ignored this all-too-real phenomenon in the same manner mine did.

BENJAMIN ANTHONY

Quinc
Memo:  LETTERS TO THE EDITOR
Edition:  Third
Section:  Sunday Magazine
Page:  8
Record Number:  9711040219