Is Celexa Going To Hurt My Boyfriend?

QUESTION:

Dear Dr. Heller,

Hi, I have a couple questions about the drug Celexa.  My boyfriend is only 15 and he has been taking it since January.  His doctor recently took him off of it.  We watched a special on 20/20 about anti-depressant drugs and the side effects that have very negative effects on people.  He is now worried about any side effects that may show up once he stopped taking the pill.  If you could give me a list of them, that would be very much appreciated.  Also, anymore information you have about this drug and mainly the effects of not taking it anymore.

Thank you

ANSWER:

There may be long term risks for all medications.  No one knows.  This includes birth control pills, Tylenol, antidepressants, antibiotics, etc.  We can only go with what we do know for sure and make value judgements. Most people who take Celexa and other SSRI’s have no long term problems.  Not only is it usually the best, the Prozac has been around the longest in the US and is the most studied medication.  It is now considered safe in pregnancy.  Celexa doesn’t have the long term US safety data yet, and a withdrawal syndrome may develop – which interestingly is treated with Prozac.  The side effects of untreated depression are devastating including premature heart disease, cancer, strokes, and particularly substance abuse.  We know for a fact that alcohol, cigarettes or other forms of nicotine, cocaine, intravenous drugs and marijuana are damaging long term.  Evaluating risks is a lot like choosing to drive a car – there are risks, but do the benefits outweigh the risks.  If the individual will self-medicate with alcohol or the other drugs mentioned above, Celexa clearly is safer. I often tell my patients that if it’s more dangerous to drive to the drug store to get the medicine than it is to take the medicine, that to me the medicine is safe.

Is Breast-Feeding Safe When Taking Zoloft?

QUESTION:

Dear Dr. Heller,

My Sister-in-law is concerned that: 1.  She may have to stop breast feeding her daughter after taking Zoloft.  2.  She can’t take another drug (I don’t know the name but has a similar effect as Valium) which was prescribed in concert with a Prozac or a Zoloft prescription which accelerated her recovery from previous crises events and still breast feed.  (The second drug was Xanax) She appears to me to be at a crisis stage where in her own words “she can’t take anymore”.  As you can imagine, the family reaction is mixed from “Get over it” to “If I could just be there to hold her”.  My Mother-in-law has similar problems and is on medication and I’m sure my wife at times has concerns of her own.  We’ve counseled her to talk to her pediatrician but in any case she should understand that her well being is more important to her daughter than the breast feeding.

ANSWER:

Like all other medical problems, it comes down to risks against the benefits.  There is no significant data regarding breast feeding when taking Zoloft.  Zoloft is used for children 6 and older. Xanax has the high possibility of causing addiction in the baby as well as the mother. The consequences of depression and raging while breast feeding – or not breast feeding at all – also need to be taken into consideration.  Maternal/infant bonding is a very, very important time.  Prozac is considered safe during pregnancy, so it might be a reasonable alternative during breast feeding.  In my experience, Prozac is more effective than Zoloft for most people as well.

Instruction sheet for both BPD dysphoria and mania/hypomania

DR. HELLER’S INSTRUCTION SHEET FOR BOTH BPD DYSPHORIA AND MANIA/HYPOMANIA

Ask The Doctor Dr. Leland Heller Biological Unhappiness

DR. HELLER’S INSTRUCTION SHEET FOR BOTH BPD DYSPHORIA AND MANIA/HYPOMANIA

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“Biological Unhappiness” “Open this book and it will open your mind.  By combining proven medical procedure with hope and inspiration, Dr. Heller has made a significant difference in thousands of patients who had little hope for recovery.  “Biological Unhappiness” contains critical information for those who have lost hope.”Zig Ziglar, motivational speaker, author, See You at the Top, Over the Top, Success for Dummies, Raising Positive kids in a Negative World.

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I’m Terrified, Do I Have To Take Medication?

QUESTION:

Dear Dr. Heller,

I have BPD and they want to put me on an antidepressant and anti-anxiety drug.  Is this standard treatment?.  I don’t want to take medication.  I’ve had very bad experiences with them in the past.  Please reply, I’m terrified Have A Nice Day!

ANSWER:

I can’t comment on whether any specific medication being prescribed for you will work or not, but I can tell you medication is standard treatment and your life will likely be full of needless misery unless you take medication.  The medical treatment of the BPD sheet I use for my patients along with the dysphoria instruction sheet are available on my Website.  There is a great deal of information available for you in this regard about medications. It’s often not just the medication, but how they interact with other diagnoses – especially the GAD and PTSD, the sequencing, and dosing.  I highly encourage you to review the screening test I use for my patients, and the books I’ve written may give you the information you are looking for to make a wise decision.

Can I Have BPD And Fractured Enjoyment?

QUESTION:

Dr. Heller,

I would like to know more about ‘fractured enjoyment’.  Can one suffer from BPD as well as fractured enjoyment?  Besides that, can these two be cured without the use of medicine?  Am I over-paranoid if I suspect that I have BPD?  I would appreciate it if you can answer my queries, especially the one on ‘fractured enjoyment’.

Thank you very much

ANSWER:

What I refer to as “fractured enjoyment” used to be called the depressed personality disorder.  It is profoundly genetic and responds quickly to Prozac. You absolutely can have both the BPD and the fractured enjoyment diagnosis, and they both respond well to safe medication.  It’s extremely unusual for an individual to do well without medication when those diagnoses are present.

Why Won’t My Therapist Listen?

QUESTION:

Dear Dr. Heller,

I am new to the idea that I have BPD.  But thanks to writings from you and many others on sites like Mental Health Sanctuary and other places I now have hope that I’m not just a crazy loser.  Other people share my struggle.  Other people have felt the same wild impulses and loopy ideas that have destroyed my life over and over.  The fact that others have recovered gave me hope I had forgotten I had lost.

Recently, after a year of functioning, holding a job and paying bills, I crashed.  I lost it on a customer at work and got fired.  I then saw an HBO special on depression with Mike Wallace, which made me realize I was putting out symptoms all over the place.  I only have the local county (Brevard–only about 90 minutes from Okeechobee!) facility called Circles of Care.  As far as free goes, it is excellent.  I made an outpatient appointment (they still remembered me) and by the time it came I had visited several sites online and found I fit the criteria for BPD.  People on Mixed Nuts (www.mixednuts.net) and The Healing Path (www.geocities.com/ubester) gave me encouragement and information that led me to believe I didn’t have to keep repeating the same cycle of striving and disappointment over and over again.  It was like I had a new way of looking at life.

The therapist I met was very disappointing.  She was competent and friendly, but reacted badly when I brought up BPD.  Prepared for this, I had a floppy disk with links and text on it but she shied away from it.  I probably came on too strong.  We discussed it for a few minutes, she was like “Why do you want to be THAT?” and I explained that it wasn’t that I wanted to be like this, but that it was reality and if I had this it would explain why I had failed at treatment so many times.  She seemed interested in having me bring printouts of the info, but chose to retain the old diagnosis of bipolar with schizoaffective tendencies that the last therapist had tagged me with (funny, I have never had a mania or a hallucination, and I know when my feelings and perceptions are out of whack–but I have several characteristic BPD traits).  She did prescribe the Neurontin and Prozac I had read work well for BPD.  I feel much better now.

Question.  How can I persuade her to spend the time and effort to learn what you research pioneers have found out about BPD and effective ways to treat it?  I realize it will be hard to break through the stigma and misconceptions surrounding BPD and harder still for others (bureaucrats) to become educated and devote scarce resources to it.

I almost feel like if the medication works and I can keep getting it there, I’ll be fortunate.  I gather the dialectical behavior therapy is long, involved, and time consuming.  I can’t see it happening on a fifteen minute appointment every two weeks basis, even though I’ll try.  I have missing years, and have long suspected some traumatic events in early childhood, like other BPD’s report, and don’t think dialectical behavior therapy the proper forum for deep digging.

Suggestions?

ANSWER:

I wish I knew!  I’ve been fighting this battle for 12 years.

The problem is old beliefs, and the incredible slowness of the medical profession – including therapists – to respond to the information.  Most medical information on the BPD is 7-14 years old.

You’re on target questioning the bipolar diagnosis if you’ve never been manic or hypomanic.

You might want to print up a few key studies to show her, or you might need to ask for another therapist.