(i) whether or not further antidepressant medication is warranted and
(ii) the severity of the discontinuation symptoms
if further antidepressant treatment is warranted
then restarting the antidepressant will cause rapid resolution of the symptoms
if further antidepressant treatment is not clinically indicated then management depends on the severity of the discontinuation symptoms
majority of symptoms are mild and in these cases treatment usually requires only that the patient be reassured about their self-limiting nature
if symptoms are of moderate severity then can be treated symptomatically
e.g. insomnia may be treated with a short course of a benzodiazepine
if severe discontinuation symptoms then the antidepressant can be reinstated, symptoms will usually resolve within 24 h and then the antidepressant can be withdrawn more cautiously
always include an appropriate explanation of the symptoms to the patient and follow-up to ensure that the symptoms have resolved
if, when attempting to withdraw and stop an antidepressant, severe discontinuation symptoms appear either during or at the end of a taper
consider increasing the antidepressant dose back to the lowest dose that prevented their appearance, and then commencing a slower taper
some patients may require a very gradual tapers to prevent discontinuation symptoms reappearing
specialist advice may suggest a from current SSRI to fluoxetine, the SSRI with the longest half-life in the management of discontinuation symptoms related to an SSRI/venlafaxine
some case reports suggest that fluoxetine can suppress discontinuation symptoms associated with other SSRIs
if the switch is successful, fluoxetine can usually be stopped after several weeks of treatment without discontinuation symptoms reappearing
effectiveness of this strategy appears to reflect the long half-life of fluoxetine (1.9 days) and its active metabolite norfluoxetine, which has a half-life of 7-15 days
Tint, A., Haddad, P. M, Anderson, I. M. The effect of rate of antidepressant tapering on the incidence of discontinuation symptoms: a randomised study. Journal of Psychopharmacology 2007
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