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Halo

Member
Acne drug linked to depression

Monday, May 26, 2008

NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - Use of isotretinoin, the active ingredient in the acne drug Accutane, apparently more than doubles the risk of depression, according to results of a study.

Still, the absolute risk is probably very small, the researchers emphasize.

The study is the first controlled investigation to find a statistically significant link between isotretinoin and depression, Dr. Anick Berard, from CHU Sainte-Justine Research Centre in Montreal, and colleagues point out in a report in the Journal of Clinical Psychiatry.

"Depression is likely to be a rare side effect of isotretinoin therapy," they wrote. Nonetheless, "current guidelines should possibly be modified to include psychiatric assessments of patients prior to and during isotretinoin therapy."

Berard's team studied 30,496 people from Quebec, Canada, who received at least one isotretinoin prescription from 1984 through 2003. During the study period, 126 of these individuals had a depression-related diagnosis, hospitalization, or treatment.

Based on previous research, the researchers focused on isotretinoin use in the 5 months prior to depression diagnosis (risk period) compared with a 5-month period a year before the diagnosis (control period).

After accounting for potential factors that might influence the results, exposure to isotretinoin was associated with a greater than 2.6-fold relative risk of depression, the team found.

"Because depression could have serious consequences, close monitoring of isotretinoin users is indicated," Berard and colleagues conclude.

SOURCE: Journal of Clinical Psychiatry, April 2008.
 

ladylore

Account Closed
That's kind of scary. What is put on your face can lead to a potential mental illness. Scary to think what is being put into a medication like that.
 

Lana

Member
This is right up there with the recent findings that there appear to be medication in lake Ontario and our waters including, but not limited to, cholesterol meds, anti-depressants, antibiotics and so on from people flushing them down the toilets. The risk, like here, was to be minute, but I wonder what happens when you add up all these minute things. Somehow, I can't help but think of a phrase, "It's the little things that mean a lot."
 

ladylore

Account Closed
This is right up there with the recent findings that there appear to be medication in lake Ontario and our waters including, but not limited to, cholesterol meds, anti-depressants, antibiotics and so on from people flushing them down the toilets. The risk, like here, was to be minute, but I wonder what happens when you add up all these minute things. Somehow, I can't help but think of a phrase, "It's the little things that mean a lot."


:goodpost::agree:
 
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