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Sertraline was developed by scientists at Pfizer and approved for medical use in the United States in 1991. It is on the World Health Organization's List of Essential Medicines [16] and available as a generic medication. [10] In 2016, sertraline was the most commonly prescribed psychotropic medication in the United States. [17]
Dosage range (mg/day) [4] ~80% SERT occupancy (mg/day) [5] [6] Ratio (dosage / 80% occupancy) Citalopram: 20–40: 40: 0.5–1 Escitalopram: 10–20: 10: 1–2 Fluoxetine: 20–80: 20: 1–4 Fluvoxamine: 50–350: 70: 0.71–5 Paroxetine: 10–60: 20: 0.5–3 Sertraline: 25–200: 50: 0.5–4 Duloxetine: 20–120: 30: 0.67–2 Venlafaxine: 75 ...
This is a complete list of clinically approved prescription antidepressants throughout the world, as well as clinically approved prescription drugs used to augment antidepressants or mood stabilizers, by pharmacological and/or structural classification.
Changing your dosage or abruptly stopping your medication could cause you to experience antidepressant withdrawal symptoms like those electric shocks — also known as “brain zaps.” Switching ...
[83] [85] [86] Higher doses of antidepressants seem to be more likely to produce emotional blunting than lower doses. [83] It can be decreased by reducing dosage, discontinuing the medication, or switching to a different antidepressant that may have less propensity for causing this side effect.
An equianalgesic chart is a conversion chart that lists equivalent doses of analgesics (drugs used to relieve pain). Equianalgesic charts are used for calculation of an equivalent dose (a dose which would offer an equal amount of analgesia) between different analgesics. [1]
Since then the number of drugs in the SSRI class has become bigger and there are now six (fluoxetine, paroxetine, citalopram, escitalopram, sertraline, and fluvoxamine), [5] [9] as demonstrated in table 1. Table 1 SSRI drugs used to treat depression.
ATC code N06 Psychoanaleptics is a therapeutic subgroup of the Anatomical Therapeutic Chemical Classification System, a system of alphanumeric codes developed by the World Health Organization (WHO) for the classification of drugs and other medical products.