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" HSI - Jenny Thompson " <HSIResearch

HSI e-Alert - Hit by Lightning

Thu, 25 Aug 2005 07:00:00 -0400

 

 

 

HSI e-Alert - Hit by Lightning

 

Health Sciences Institute e-Alert

****************************************************

August 25, 2005

 

 

 

Dear Reader,

 

" If the thunder don't get you then the lightning will. "

 

That song lyric popped into my head when I recently came across two

oddly related news items on the same day. Here are the headlines:

 

From Reuters: Study: Antidepressants stop repeat heart attacks

 

From the Associated Press: FDA warns about antidepressants, suicide

 

Sometimes it seems like you just can't win. But for those who suffer

from depression following a heart attack, there's a winning

combination of nutrients that may successfully relieve depression

while also improving heart health.

 

-----------

The telltale heart

-----------

 

Researchers at Stanford University recently examined how

antidepressant drugs may affect mortality among heart attack survivors.

 

For about two and a half years, the Stanford team followed more than

1,800 patients who were diagnosed as depressed after a heart attack.

Researchers calculated that patients who took antidepressants had a

significantly lower risk of a recurrent nonfatal heart attack compared

with those who didn't take this type of drug.

 

Lead author of the study - C. Barr Taylor, M.D., of the Stanford

University School of Medicine - told Reuters news service that he

would, " recommend that any post-heart attack patient with depression

be evaluated for treatment. "

 

But there's a problem with that recommendation. If you ask someone

who's just had a heart attack if they're depressed or blue or low (put

it any way you like), you'll probably get a " Yes " in return. After

all, their heart has just attacked them. That's enough to shake nearly

anyone's peace of mind.

 

Based on such a casual evaluation, many mainstream doctors would not

hesitate to automatically write a prescription for an antidepressant.

And while antidepressant drugs might achieve the desired effect on a

patient's mood and outlook, there are daunting adverse effects lurking

as well.

 

-----------

Rolling thunder

-----------

 

Last year, the FDA issued a warning that adults and children who use

the class of antidepressant drugs called selective serotonin reuptake

inhibitors (SSRIs) may have an increased risk of suicide. After

reanalyzing the results of hundreds of SSRI studies the FDA issued a

second warning last month, cautioning doctors and SSRI users to watch

closely for signs of suicidal behavior.

 

So, should a depressed heart attack patient risk the development of

suicidal tendencies in order to reduce the risk of a second heart

attack? Admittedly, the risk that SSRI use will trigger a suicide is

small. But the risk of other side effects is not so small.

 

The known potential side effects of SSRI drugs include nausea,

headache, anxiety, dry mouth, insomnia, sexual dysfunction, diarrhea

and serotonin syndrome; a condition characterized by psychotic

episodes. And in an e-Alert I sent you in 2001, I told you about a UK

study that showed how SSRI use significantly increases the risk of

upper gastrointestinal bleeding - especially in older patients.

 

The side effect on that list that perhaps seems most benign is dry

mouth, a salivary gland dysfunction known as xerostomia among

dentists. In another 2001 e-Alert, HSI Panelist Richard P. Cohan,

D.D.S., wrote: " As a group, antidepressants cause more xerostomia than

any other. And, as you may know, xerostomia leads to an increase in

caries (cavities), periodontal disease, and candidiasis, a yeast

infection in the mouth often referred to as thrush. While not everyone

who takes antidepressants experiences these side effects, those who do

are often left with serious, permanent damage. "

 

-----------

Heart friendly

-----------

 

As I've noted in previous e-Alerts, there are several nutrients that

are known to help keep depression in check without triggering the

powerful adverse side effects of SSRIs. For instance, high levels of B

vitamins and magnesium have been shown to reduce depression symptoms.

And both of these nutrients promote heart health as well.

 

Many studies have shown that omega-3 fatty acids also do double duty

in preventing depression and heart disease.

 

In a 2003 study from the Netherlands, researchers examined blood

samples from more than 260 elderly, depressed subjects and found what

they called a " direct effect of fatty acid composition on mood. "

Subjects with depressive disorders had a significantly higher ratio of

omega-6 to omega-3 fatty acids compared to more than 400 randomly

selected subjects.

 

And in an the e-Alert " Take it to Heart " (2/24/04), I told you about a

study that analyzed 16 years of data, collected from more than 120,000

women. Researchers found that subjects in the group with the highest

omega-3 intake had about half the risk of developing coronary heart

disease compared to subjects in the group with the lowest intake.

 

Of course, that doesn't necessarily mean that omega-3 intake will

prevent a second heart attack. But you can be pretty certain you'll

never hear about someone committing suicide or suffering from

gastrointestinal bleeding, anxiety, sexual dysfunction or xerostomia

as a direct result of taking supplements of omega-3, magnesium and B

vitamins.

 

 

****************************************************

 

....and another thing

 

" We expect accountability, we expect them to be open with us, we

expect them to be honest with us. "

 

That comment was made last week by Marsha Robbins, the forewoman of

the jury that found Merck liable for the death of a man who suffered

an arrhythmia while taking Vioxx, Merck's arthritis painkiller.

 

Apparently Ms. Robbins doesn't read the e-Alert. If she did, her

expectations of honesty from drug companies might be considerably lower.

 

The jury awarded the widow of Robert C. Ernst more than a quarter of a

billion dollars: $24.5 million to cover economic losses and mental

anguish, and $229 million in punitive damages.

 

That second award is $229 million worth of anger. Not from Mrs. Ernst,

but from the jurors who received a first-hand education in exactly how

devious drug companies can be when they choose corporate profits over

consumer safety. (For more details on the Vioxx scandal, see the

e-Alerts " Man's Best Friend " (10/4/04), and " Hasty Pudding " (2/24/05),

both available on our web site at hsibaltimore.com.)

 

Merck lawyers will appeal this staggering award. Meanwhile, they're

preparing defense in more than 4,000 additional Vioxx-related

lawsuits. According to the New York Times, lawyers expect there may

eventually be as many as 100,000 Vioxx suits filed.

 

All of those juries will be made up of typical consumers and each in

turn will hear how Merck suppressed clinical trial evidence about the

dangers of Vioxx.

 

Anger? A quarter of a billion is just the tip of the iceberg.

 

To Your Good Health,

 

Jenny Thompson

 

****************************************************

 

 

****************************************************

 

 

 

Sources:

 

" Effects of Antidepressant Medication on Morbidity and Mortality in

Depressed Patients After Myocardial Infarction " Archives of General

Psychiatry, Vol. 62, No. 7, July 2005, archpsyc.ama-assn.org

" Study: Antidepressants Stop Repeat Heart Attacks " Reuters, 7/4/05,

cnn.com

" FDA Warns About Antidepressants, Suicide " The Associated Press,

7/1/05, cnn.com

" Jury Calls Merck Liable in Death of Man on Vioxx " Alex Berenson, The

New York Times, 8/19/05, nytimes.com

 

**********************

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