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Antidepressants During Pregnancy

Can I take anti-depressants while pregnant? by The Babble Staff

November 28, 2006

Antidepressants During Pregnancy

PRO-ANTIDEPRESSANTS

ANTI-ANTIDEPRESSANTS

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AMER. JOURNAL OF OBSTETRICS AND GYNECOLOGY
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WOMEN'S HEALTH INFORMATION
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FDA
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WEBMD
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PITTSBURGH POST-GAZETTE

THE BABBLE TAKE

The full effects of second-generation antidepressants such as Prozac and Zoloft on pregnant women and their children are unknown. Specialists say different risks are involved at the various stages of pregnancy, and few thorough studies have been done on how hormonal changes affect the way drugs are metabolized. Some studies maintain that the risks are negligible, while others indicate withdrawal symptoms in newborns and increased chances of low birth weight and preterm labor. The hormonal changes of pregnancy leave depression-prone women vulnerable. To some medical experts, the risks of taking a depressed woman off medication during pregnancy outweigh potential side effects to her fetus. Other doctors urge caution, claiming that any drug use during pregnancy is potentially harmful and that little is known about the long-term effects of antidepressants on child development. Others advocate holistic alternatives, ranging from light therapy to diet supplements. However, experts agree that women should talk to their doctors before embarking on any therapies, holistic or otherwise.

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    PRO: American Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology "Birth Outcomes after Prenatal Exposure to Antidepressant Medication"

    Women who take antidepressants during pregnancy have no more risk of having a baby with birth defects than women who don't take the drugs, according to a study.

    The use of antidepressants from a class known as selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs) during pregnancy did not increase the risk of congenital malformations, low birth weight or preterm labor, researchers said.

    Previous studies have found that SSRIs might increase the risk of early labor, however the current study found no such association.

    Three of the women taking Prozac at relatively high doses did have low birth weight babies, however. Researchers say this may have been a result of the women's depression rather than the drug.

    There have also been reports of complications in newborns such as jitteriness and rapid breathing associated with antidepressant use during pregnancy, which researchers say need to be further investigated.

    Based on the study's results, researchers concluded that pregnant women should minimize their use of antidepressants when possible and opt for other options such as psychotherapy and group support.

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    MIDDLE GROUND: Women's Health Information "Fluoxetine (Prozac) and Pregnancy, Birth Outcomes in Pregnant Women Taking Fluoxetine"

    Many women are taking the drug fluoxetine (Prozac) either when they fall pregnant or while they are trying for pregnancy. There is some research into the outcomes of pregnancies in women who are using this common anti-depressant. There are two concerns with regard to pregnancy and Prozac — firstly whether its use in the first trimester is associated with any risk to the developing fetus — is there an increased risk of congenital abnormalities? Secondly, does it affect the outcome of the pregnancy or the subsequent development of the fetus?

    There is no evidence that first trimester use of fluoxetine leads to higher rates of pregnancy loss or increased risk of fetal abnormality. There is consistency among the animal and human studies and significant numbers have now been accrued (about 1,000 first trimester exposures in all).

    In 1996, a study was published that suggested worse outcomes for the babies of women who continued fluoxetine usage during the last trimester of pregnancy [3]. They included 73 exposed infants and found higher rates of early delivery, smaller babies, increased risk of breathing problems and feeding difficulties, and more admissions to the neonatal intensive care unit. ...read the full article

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    MIDDLE GROUND: FDA "Pregnancy and the Drug Dilemma"

    There are no definitive answers about the long-term effects of Zoloft and many other medications on babies. Experts say that while they have certainly learned some useful information for successful drug treatment in pregnancy, their knowledge is limited for the most part. That goes for information in the literature and on the labels doctors use to make clinical decisions, says Beth Conover, a genetic counselor who coordinates the Teratogen Information Service at the University of Nebraska Medical Center. "Teratogen" is a term that refers to any substance with the potential to cause birth defects.

    Conover says advising patients and doctors about medication use in pregnancy is like working in shades of gray. "Parents want someone to assure them their babies will be OK, and of course that's what we want to do," she says. "But it's very hard to prove absolute safety. We would need extensive, long-term studies to do that, and we don't have them in many cases."

    Dianne Kennedy, a regulatory health project manager with the Food and Drug Administration's Center for Drug Evaluation and Research (CDER), says withholding all medication during pregnancy is not the answer. Too many conditions pose more of a health risk if left untreated, she adds (see "The Danger of Untreated Disease"). In fact, medication use in pregnancy is common, and the number of prescriptions tends to rise with the mother's age. "We use the safest, best drugs we can so women can receive the treatment they need," Conover says. ...read the full article

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    ANTI/MIDDLE GROUND: WebMD "Expert Panel Says Prozac Affects Fetus—and Adult Sex"

    Taking the popular antidepressant drug Prozac late in pregnancy may be toxic to the fetus, a government report shows.

    Mothers who take Prozac during the third trimester of pregnancy risk premature delivery, the report says. They also put their infants at risk of "poor neonatal adaptation."

    Prozac taken by breastfeeding mothers, the report says, may retard infants' early growth.

    These aren't Prozac's only effects on reproduction. The report also says that the antidepressant also has "reproductive toxicity." Adults taking the drug may find sexual orgasm difficult or impossible. And some women taking the drug may have changes in the length of their menstrual cycle. ...read the full article

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    ANTI: Pittsburgh Post-Gazette "Antidepressants in Pregnancy May Pose Risks"

    Pregnant women who take antidepressants such as Prozac and Paxil may be increasing the chances that their babies suffer from irritability, tremors and seizures at birth.

    But while the babies of women who took antidepressants in the third trimester of pregnancy were three times more likely to have these symptoms than other babies, the effects were not found to last more than a few weeks, doctors at the University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine report in today's issue of the Journal of the American Medical Association.

    Pregnant women with depression can be treated in a few different ways, including psychotherapy. Pharmaceutical solutions include a type of antidepressants called selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors, or SSRIs, which include Prozac, Paxil and Zoloft; and a type called serotonin/norepinephrine reuptake inhbitiors, or SNRIs, such as Effexor. This study looked at women taking both classes of medication; both types appear to affect babies. ...read the full article

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