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Worse Living Through Chemistry

The Downsides of Prozac

by Craig Lambert

 
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Illustration by Lynne Foy

Like many others, Elizabeth Wurtzel ’89 and Lauren Slater, Ed. M. ’89—the authors, respectively, of Prozac Nation (1994) and Prozac Diary (1998)—suffered “Prozac poop-out”: the drug’s mood-altering effects wore off and depression returned. In fact, according to a 1995 study by associate professor of psychiatry Maurizio Fava, Prozac wears off within a year for about one-third of those who take it. “This is tolerance,” says clinical instructor in psychiatry and University Health Services physician Joseph Glenmullen, M.D. ’84. His new book, Prozac Backlash (Simon & Schuster), documents not only tolerance, withdrawal syndromes, and drug dependency, but a panoply of dangers linked to “Prozac-like drugs”—selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs). “We now have unequivocal evidence from a wide range of side effects that Prozac-type drugs impair the normal functioning of the brain,” Glenmullen says.

SSRIs include Prozac, Zoloft, Paxil, Luvox, Celexa—trade names that invariably include an x or z for drugs that are best known as antidepressants. But “calling them that is misleading,” says Glenmullen, who notes that primary-care doctors, not psychiatrists, write 70 percent of SSRI prescriptions. SSRIs are now prescribed for anxiety, obsessions, substance abuse, chronic pain, shyness, even “to feel ‘better than well,’” Glenmullen says. “They’ve become all-purpose psychoanalgesics. People think they’ve got to keep up with the Joneses, pharmacologically—if everyone at your office is taking Zoloft to stay alert and work long hours, you’ve got to have it, too.”

Prozac sales surged in the wake of Listening to Prozac, the 1993 bestseller by psychiatrist Peter Kramer ’70, M.D. ’76, who coined the term “cosmetic psychopharmacology” and sang that with Prozac he had seen “patient after patient become…’better than well.’ Prozac seemed to give social confidence to the habitually timid, to make the sensitive brash, to lend the introvert the social skills of a salesman.” Sales also broadened as pharmaceutical houses developed what some are now calling “a strategy of marketing diseases as an effective way of marketing drugs. It’s a trend toward pathologizing daily life,” Glenmullen says. He points to a psychiatric syndrome called “social phobia,” a very rare disorder that a therapist might encounter once or twice in a career—people so terrified of social contact that they may, for example, avoid going to restaurants for fear of being seen eating in public. “Over the last few years, psychiatrists have been inundated with drug-company mailings that cite ‘experts’ renaming ‘social phobia’ as ‘social-anxiety disorder,’” Glenmullen says. “The Food and Drug Administration [FDA] recently approved Paxil to treat social phobia. But the mass media report this to the public as a treatment for shyness!”

The drug panaceas, however, may be illusory. Rigorous studies have shown that the placebo effect accounts for most—at least 64 percent, and perhaps much more—of SSRIs’ benefits. Furthermore, in clinical trials, side effects often tip off research subjects that they are getting the active drug. Better-designed studies use placebos with side effects (like dry mouth), but no antidepressant properties. Under these conditions, Glenmullen writes, the “performance of the placebo climbs and the difference between the placebo and the antidepressant is virtually washed out.”

What is not washed out are the side effects, which include the potential for brain damage. A few years ago one of Glenmullen’s patients who was taking Prozac developed a tic—the tongue darting in and out of the mouth—that persisted for months after the drug was discontinued. That sent Glenmullen to Countway Library. He found reports of tics and other neurological side effects, like drug-induced Parkinsonism, associated with SSRIs. “The tics include lip smacking, lip puckering, fishlike kissing motions, and pelvic thrusting,” Glenmullen says. “They are involuntary, disfiguring, and can be very noticeable—and may persist long after the drug is stopped. This is the dread side effect in psychiatry, and it can indicate brain damage. Such reactions are not rare. Neurologic agitation is estimated to occur in 10 to 25 percent of patients, and muscle spasms in 10 percent.”

The FDA mandates clinical trials for antidepressants that typically last only six weeks and primarily test the drug’s efficacy and short-term safety. “We lack systematic monitoring of long-term side effects,” Glenmullen says, noting that a former FDA head estimated that only 1 percent of long-term side effects comes to the agency’s attention. Glenmullen adds that such side effects of psychiatric drugs typically take three decades to gain a critical level of attention, as with the restlessness and involuntary twitching—tardive dyskinesia—associated with Thorazine and other major tranquilizers. “Those drugs were prescribed the way Prozac is now,” Glenmullen states. (To date, an estimated 30 million people have ingested SSRIs.)

Earlier generations of serotonin-targeting drugs like cocaine, amphetamines, diet pills, and Ecstasy “have been exhaustively studied in animals, and all have been shown to be neurotoxic to cells in the brain—for example, destroying nerve endings. But there’s very little comparable research on the SSRIs,” Glenmullen says. “To do animal research, you need tiny doses of the pure drug. Yet researchers say that each pharmaceutical company controls the supply of pure drug while it is under patent. To do studies under a company’s auspices means signing a contract that allows it to veto publication unilaterally.”

Hence, side effects show up in the massive field trial of the marketplace. “Repeated studies have shown that about 60 percent of patients have some form of sexual dysfunction—loss of libido, difficulty reaching orgasm, impotence—on SSRIs,” Glenmullen says. “But Eli Lilly’s official figure is 2 to 5 percent.” More ominously, the Prozac “lift” has lifted some into violent rampages, like that of the Louisville printing-press operator who in 1989 killed eight and wounded a dozen more with an AK-47 assault rifle just weeks after starting Prozac. Glenmullen has seen some of his own patients besieged by suicidal thoughts of “a particularly obsessive quality” after starting Prozac, and says that the Swedish and German equivalents of the Physician’s Desk Reference warn doctors of this potential side effect and provide guidelines for managing it.

For his part, Glenmullen has long prescribed Prozac and other SSRIs and continues to use them in specific cases. But he also suggests numerous treatment alternatives for anyone using or contemplating the use of such drugs—including psychotherapy, cognitive therapy, behavioral treatment, 12-step programs, herbal remedies like St. John’s wort, exercise, and diet modifications. About one SSRI user in four really does benefit from the drug, he says, but he adds, “There is no free lunch. Most of these people who feel so good about the long-term use of Prozac think it’s cost-free. Patients need to be better educated about the risk-benefit analysis. If they are taking Prozac to feel ‘better than well,’ that’s a big mistake.”

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Responses to “The Downsides of Prozac

  1. March 25, 2009

    My fiance has been on the generic from of Prozac, Fluoxetine(spelling is off)for 8 years now and has never changed his dosage. Is this normal? A doctor in Sacramento was the one who got him started but would never have him go in and get checked. My fiance would just call to get a refill every month. My fiance finally after 7 yrs of not being monitored by this doctor, went to see a new doctor and he also kept him on the same dose.

    What are the long term effects of being on this drug? I really wish he would get off of it but I think he is addicted to it, is this possible?

    Please give me some insight if possible?
    Thank you,
    Arlene

    ~arlene

  2. March 28, 2009

    Hi Arlene,
    I have been taking Prozac for 10 years and would like to wean off, so I was interested in the answer you received. My doc told me to take it forever. I feel it might be covering up problems and I want to get to the root of them. Plus, I carry about 20 extra pounds and have been reading about cortisol and seratonin and the connection between the two. I would like to lower my cortisol level and I think the Prozac may be getting in the way! I would be interested in hearing a reply to your question. thanks
    kk

    ~kelley king

  3. April 5, 2009

    Arlene, maybe your fiance is lucky not to have to change his dosage over all that time. Last fall, I went back to the psychiatrist because it seemed that the depression was returning—I was more irritable, couldn’t get interested in anything I used to enjoy, sleep troubles, etc.) After questioning me, the psychiatrist told me that Prozac is known to wear off within 2 years for some people, and the solution was to try a slightly higher dose or to try a different medication. But I demurred on the latter because I’d been warned by my first psychiatrist that the other types were addictive. Now it seems I have a tolerance for Prozac (the higher dose helps, but I’ve developed trouble with intermittent frenzied thoughts and restlessness, and inability to keep track of things because of it, not to mention the sexual difficulties worsening). Before I change anything, though, I’ve asked my husband to read “What to Do When Someone You Love Is Depressed” by Mitch Golant and Susan K. Golant. Depression is serious, and there is so much stigma to mental illness. He and I have the benefit of 30 years together and a lot of emotional-sexual work behind us, whereas you and your fiance are just thinking of starting out. Even w/all that time, I still need my husband to know what this disease is about, so he knows why not to hound me about taking medication or not, for him to be able to identify the triggers in our relationship affected by this disease, and make him learn on his own so that he can stay out of co-dependency over this. Be clear on why you want your fiance to get off this drug, but especially on what to expect and how you will handle things and be of support as his healing progresses (or when there are bad weeks).

    ~Monica in northern California

  4. April 28, 2009

    I have been taking fluoxetine for 13 years. I have tried several times to come off of the drug but went right back into depression. I would like everyone to know that even though there are stigmas about taking this medicine and also about depression that it is very real and is not just something you can get rid of by “pulling up your boot straps”. I am very grateful that this drug exists and so far I don’t see any side effects that are life altering.

    Cheryl

    ~Cheryl

  5. May 1, 2009

    I am only 29 and have been taking prozac (or the generic form fluoxetine) since I was 17. I, like Cheryl have tried several times to ween off of it and unfortunately I also slid back into depression each time. While I strongly believe that it is important for people to seek help from a therapist and other outlets for traumatic experiences and emotional problems, true depression is not necessarily caused by an event but by a disorder of the brain. I know several people, myself included who feel depressed for no good reason. I liken depression to any other disorder that has to be treated with medication in order for normal life to be possible, such as diabetes or epilepsy. Your husband is probably not addicted to Prozac but rather has found a solution to his problem that nothing else could fix and without it he may not be able to function.

    ~Rebecca

  6. May 5, 2009

    You guys need to read “The Antidepressant Solution” by Dr Glenmullen. Depression is a WITHDRAWAL SYMPTOM that you experience while coming off SSRI’s.

    I was on Lexapro for ~2 years, at which point I developed tolerance and had to up the medication just to function…so I switched to Zoloft for the past 1.5 years. Thank God I found Glenmullen’s books before this process of dependence and burnout continued: I am now weaning myself off of Zoloft (starting from 200 mg) as outlined in “The Antidpressant Solution”. Several months ago I was beginning to “poopout” on Zoloft, i.e. my underlying causes of anxiety and depression returned like clockwork with exams—I’m pursuing a PhD in physics. The drug did not address the underlying causes of my emotional troubles, and I am just now beginning to actually address the real problems (4 years and $1000 of pills later). Thanks to the drugs, I have to take about a 6 month medical leave while I gain some emotional stability, after spending about 5 months going through severe withdrawals (some people have very severe withdrawals).

    So, how do I know that I am experiencing withdrawals, and not a recurrence of my “biological chemical imbalance” which caused my depression to begin with? I know because, like clockwork, from about 2 to 10 days following each 25 mg dose reduction, I experience anxiety, depression, and now I’m noticing neurological symptoms (visual disturbances—like imagining a bird flying in the corner of my eye; agitation; weird sexual side effects; sleep pattern changes; difficulty with memory; slurred speech). Then my mood gradually returns to normal and I can think more clearly, have more energy, and have little to no anxiety. I was not a religious person before this, but am beginning to pray that none of these side effects is permanent, or will interfere with my PhD.

    This is very creepy…don’t let anyone you care about continue taking these drugs if you can help it, and don’t let them start in the first place. Instead, take a 6 month break from work and spend time relaxing…you may end up having to do so anyway when you poop-out and have to withdraw from the meds. Or even worse, the severe depression that comes with withdrawals and poop-out might lead someone to do the unthinkable. It’s amazing how logical suicide seems when you’re curled up in bed crying for no particular reason.

    I’m not joking…get off this stuff.

    ~Jon

  7. June 7, 2009

    I was messed up after Vietnam, no doubt, and i wasn’t a regular infantryman, but in a bad spot. In the 7’s the VA said anyone that was depressed more than a 6 month after returning had definitely been messed up before serving and their problems were rooted in childhood not Vietnam. To this day initial clinical Psuchs at the Vet Ceneters spend hours going over a vets childhood to find anyway they can to help deny a claim.I’m 60 and met my wife, who is also depressed but takes no drugs or alcohol only 15 yrs ago and have 2 freinds left. One was a heroin Junkie for over 40 years. He knows more about drugs and their effects than any psychiatrist I have ever met and flipped out when I told him the VA had been giving me prozac, at about the time my memory began to diasappear. The VA has now done a study that shows most people with PTSD THINK they are developing early onset alzeimers… Now because of this letter and others I believe I may be developing early onset alzeimers, but in the more than a year since I threw out the prozac my memory is improving a lot, but my coordination is screwed up. I take methadone from a pain clinic with valium and didn’t become suicidally depressed again until a few weeks ago and that is going away. I have been rated at 50% PTSD disability by the VA but refused group therapy by the psychologist that wouldn’t see me, not by my psychologist. Other vets say the psychologists don’t want anyone in their therapy that isn’t a sure thing for getting 100% PTSD by having an infantry job, purple heart, or Valor medal. Guys from Vietnam that just got bombed and shot at and had to drive possibly mined highways don’t count unless the shrapnel hit them and a medical doctor wrote it up. My Heroin junkie freind that flipped out when I told him I took the prozac called them “SNIPER PILLS.” and told me I would go through withdrawal. over a year later I still am but I will never go back to the prozac. It killed my sex life, they gave me the blue pills and testosterone and the combination of testosterone and prozac made me a maniac and when I quit both my testicles have almost disappered and I’ve started growing tits, I went back on the testosterone but had to about fight for vardenafil. I’ve forgotten what the structure of this letter was to be, read between the lines.

    ~Joseph Belle-Isle

  8. June 30, 2009

    Say what you want about prozac, but I have been on it over 7 years and it has been a life saver for me.

    ~Dianne

  9. July 1, 2009

    It takes about a month before it really starts benefiting you…and then it may serves as a lifesaver. Some of the side effects of Prozac include Abnormal dreams; decreased sexual desire or ability, anxiety, drowsiness, diarrhea dizziness, dry mouth, flu-like symptoms (eg, fever, chills, muscle aches), increased sweating, flushing, loss of appetite, nausea, runny nose, nervousness, sore throat.

    ~Community health network

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