open access publication

Article, 2020

Protracted withdrawal syndrome after stopping antidepressants: a descriptive quantitative analysis of consumer narratives from a large internet forum

Therapeutic Advances in Psychopharmacology, ISSN 2045-1253, 2045-1261, Volume 10, Page 2045125320980573, 10.1177/2045125320980573

Contributors

Hengartner, Michael Pascal 0000-0002-2956-2969 (Corresponding author) [1] Schulthess, Lukas [2] Sørensen, Anders 0000-0002-5850-7854 [3] Framer, Adele [4]

Affiliations

  1. [1] Zürich University of Applied Sciences
  2. [NORA names: Switzerland; Europe, Non-EU; OECD];
  3. [2] Zurich University of Applied Sciences
  4. [NORA names: Switzerland; Europe, Non-EU; OECD];
  5. [3] Cochrane
  6. [NORA names: Cochrane Denmark ; Non-Profit Organisations; Denmark; Europe, EU; Nordic; OECD];
  7. [4] https://www.survivingantidepressants.org/.

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Protracted withdrawal syndrome (PWS) after stopping antidepressants (frequently also referred to as post-acute withdrawal syndrome or PAWS) has been described in a few case reports. However, a detailed quantitative analysis of specific symptom manifestations in antidepressant PWS is still lacking. METHODS: We extracted patient narratives from a large English-language internet forum SurvivingAntidepressants.org, a peer support site concerned about withdrawal from antidepressants. PWS was ascertained based on diagnostic criteria proposed by Chouinard and Chouinard, specifically ⩾6 months of continuous antidepressant use, with emergence of new and/or more intense symptoms after discontinuation that last beyond the initial 6 weeks of acute withdrawal. We assessed medication history, outcome of PWS, and the prevalence of specific symptoms. RESULTS: In total, n = 69 individual reports of protracted withdrawal were selected for analysis. At time of the subjects' most recent reports, duration of PWS ranged from 5 to 166 months, mean = 37 months, median = 26 months. Length of time on the antidepressant causing protracted withdrawal ranged from 6 to 278 months, mean = 96 months, and median = 79 months. Throughout the withdrawal experience, affective symptoms, mostly anxiety, depression, emerging suicidality and agitation, were reported by 81%. Somatic symptoms, mostly headache, fatigue, dizziness, brain zaps, visual changes, muscle aches, tremor, diarrhea, and nausea were reported by 75%. Sleep problems (44%) and cognitive impairments (32%) were mentioned less frequently. These broad symptom domains were largely uncorrelated. CONCLUSION: PWS or PAWS from antidepressants can be severe and long-lasting, and its manifestations clinically heterogeneous. Long-term antidepressant exposure may cause multiple body system impairments. Although both somatic and affective symptoms are frequent, they are mostly unrelated in terms of occurrence. Proper recognition and detection of PWS thus requires a comprehensive assessment of medication history, duration of the withdrawal syndrome, and its various somatic, affective, sleep, and cognitive symptoms.

Keywords

AChE, Chouinard, Internet, Internet forums, ZAP, acute withdrawal, affective symptoms, agitation, analysis, antidepressant exposure, antidepressant use, antidepressants, anxiety, assessed medical history, assessment of medical history, brain, case report, cases, changes, cognitive impairment, cognitive symptoms, comprehensive assessment, consumer narratives, criteria, depression, detection, diagnostic criteria, diarrhea, discontinuation, domain, duration, emergency, experiments, exposure, fatigue, forum, headache, history, impairment, intense symptoms, length, length of time, long-lasting, manifestations, medical history, months, muscle, muscle aches, narratives, nausea, occurrence, outcomes, patient narratives, patients, paw, peer, prevalence, prevalence of specific symptoms, problem, protracted withdrawal, protracted withdrawal syndrome, quantitative analysis, recent reports, recognition, reports, sites, sleep, sleep problems, somatic symptoms, specific symptoms, stopping antidepressants, subjects, suicide, support sites, symptom domains, symptom manifestation, symptoms, syndrome, system impairment, time, tremor, use, visual changes, weeks, withdrawal, withdrawal experience, withdrawal syndrome

Data Provider: Digital Science