SSRI Birth Defects
FDA to Evaluate the Risk of SSRI Birth Defects PDF Print


February 17, 2009. By Lucy Campbell
Sacramento, CA: In early February the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) announced that it would review a lengthy list of drugs for potential safety problems. Selective Serotonin Receptor Antagonist (SSRI) antidepressants are on that list. Specifically, the agency said they would be evaluating the risk of SSRI birth defects.

SSRIs are widely used in the US and many women who become pregnant while taking an antidepressant are advised by their physicians to remain on their medication. Some reports even indicate that the benefits of staying on medication outweigh the risks associated with untreated depression and post partum depression. There are likely many women who would disagree with this advice.

Sarah is one of those women. Sarah took Paxil while she was pregnant, and she believes her son is paying the price.

Sarah remembers that her son began throwing up from the minute he was born. The doctors told her that was normal, but that didn't explain why her newborn son appeared to have a pinched esophagus tube. He underwent many x-rays to try and determine what was wrong, but Sarah was never provided with an adequate explanation.

When she brought her son home she remembers that he would cry a lot, because he had stomach cramps and she wondered if this was normal. She suspected that given his medical history so far, it probably wasn't. She never did find out.
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SSRI Birth Defects: A Litany of Heartaches PDF Print


   

 March 7, 2009 Lucy Campbell

 Fairmount, IN: As the controversy over Paxil birth defects and other anti-depressant related birth defects continues, so too does the heartache of parents whose children were born suffering from these defects. Parents like Jenny, Sheila, Angela, Theresa, and Jennifer, all of whom had children whose heart conditions are likely the result of selective serotonin reuptake inhibitor (SSRI) and selective norepinephrine reuptake inhibitor (SNRI) exposure in the womb, also known as SSRI birth defects.

Jenny's son was born in 2002, with a list of heart defects that defies your worst nightmares. Her son was born with what is known as Shone's complex, which is essentially a series of 4 obstructive or potentially obstructive left-sided cardiac lesions. He had surgery to repair a coarctation--or narrowing--of the aorta when he was just 7 days old, followed by open heart surgery when he was nearly 4 months old for an ventricle septal defect, and atrial septal defect.

Additionally, when he was born his ductus arteriosus failed to close, which required medicine to close it. He also has a leak in his mitral valve that has to be checked regularly by his cardiologist at a children's hospital. Today, he suffers from developmental delays and goes for regular therapy, and has required special education. His doctor does not know his prognosis. Jenny wonders if the SNRI Wellbutrin could have caused her son's health problems.

Sheila took an SSRI during the first trimester of her pregnancy. Her son was born with tracheomalacia, pulmonary valve stenosis, hydrocephalus, cleft lip and palate, and his esophagus was unattached. To this day, years after his birth, he has numerous health problems.

Angela's child was born with heart, respiratory and abdominal problems and suffered withdrawal symptoms immediately after being born. Angela was taking Prozac during her pregnancy.

Like Jenny, Theresa was taking the SNRI Wellbutrin while pregnant. Her son was born with a heart defect. He was in the neonatal intensive care unit for 8 days after he was born. When Theresa and her husband took their son home he was on a heart monitor. Today, their son is on amiodarone, which is a medication used to control his heart rate.

And then there is Jennifer's story. She wonders if the Zoloft she took during her pregnancy resulted in the premature birth of her baby, and his subsequent breathing problems. She was advised not to breast feed her baby because of the drug in her system. After the fact, Jennifer's doctor told her that her child's problems were probably due to the Zoloft. But that's a bit too late to be finding out about the possibility of SSRI birth defects.

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