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Antidepressants, when used appropriately and in combination with an individualized psychosocial approach, can dramatically improve depressive symptoms and the quality of life of residents who have major depressive disorder. The selection of antidepressants needs to take into account the patient’s medical problems, as well as what side effects one wants or wants to avoid for a particular patient. There is no compelling evidence that one antidepressant works better than any other for the treatment of majpr depressive disorder in long-term care populations. Selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs) are probably the most commonly selected first-line medications for the treatment of major depressive disorders in long-term care residents. Serotonin-norepinephrine reuptake inhibitors) have also been associated with a potentially increased risk of bleeding, although the risk appears to be lower compared to SSRIs.
The use of selectiveserotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs) is an independent risk factor for bleeding events. Antidepressants and oral anticoagulants (OACs) are often prescribed together as depression and anxiety often coexist with cardiovascular diseases, atrial fibrillation and thromboembolic disorders. Serotonin is released from platelets in response to vascular injury, promoting aggregation. Inhibition of serotonin transporter (responsible for the uptake of serotonin into platelets) can lead into a reduced ability to form clots and a subsequent increase in the risk of bleeding. Direct oral aticoagulants (DOACs), rivaroxaban, apixaban and edoxaban are primarily metabolized via CYP3A4. The co-administration of antidepressants with inhibitory effects on CYP3A4 may theoretically interact with them.
Objectives
Presentation of a case of upper gastrointestinal bleeding after initiation of Apixaban in a patient taking Sertraline and literature review.
Methods
We carried out a literature review in Pubmed electing those articles focused on bleeding risk between newer direct oral antigulants and selective serotinin reuptake inhibitors.
Results
A 66-year-old woman sought medical assistance for generalized ecchymosis and melena. She was diagnosed with atrial fibrillation treated with apixaban 7 days ago. Concomitant treatment between apixaban and sertraline was the possible cause of upper gastrointestinal bleeding and ecchymosis. We had to switch sertraline into vortioxetine (with less dregree of serotonin reuptake inhibition) and add proton-pump inhibitor (Omeprazole) in order to decrease the risk of bleeding.
Conclusions
SSRIs increase the risk of gastrointestinal bleeding, much more in case of concomitant use of oral anticoagulants. If SSRI use cannot be avoided, monitor closely and prescribe proton pump inhibitors.
There are four types of cerebral vascular malformations: arteriovenous malformations (AVMs), cavernous malformations (CMs), capillary telangiectasies, and venous malformations. This chapter presents a review of the pertinent literature on CMs regarding epidemiology, genetics, pathology, clinical findings, and therapeutic management with special emphasis placed upon the natural bleeding risk of these malformations. The most sensitive imaging study to detect CMs is magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). Predictive factors for intracranial hemorrhage in patients harboring CMs is a critical issue because the optimal therapeutic management of such lesions is tailored according to the bleeding risk. The main goal of radiosurgical treatment should be a significant reduction in bleeding risk, especially after a latency period of 2 years. By genetic linkage analyses, three cerebral CM loci have been assigned to chromosome 7p, 7q, and 3q. They account for all familial forms of CM, thus constituting a formidable Mendelian model of stroke.
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