DOSULEPIN HYDROCHLORIDE

(Redirected from Dosulepin)

'Dosulepin hydrochloride' (INN) (formerly the BAN 'dothiepin hydrochloride') is an antidepressant of the tricyclic family. It is sold under the brand names 'Prothiaden' and 'Thaden'.

Contents
Indications
Side effects
Contra-indications
Drug interactions
Overdose
See also

Indications


Dosulepin is relatively mild and is used for low level anxiety depression and similar disorders, particularly where insomnia and/or loss of appetite are present. It can take between two and four weeks of regular usage to become effective, it is often started at a low level and the dosage increased if this is ineffective. The drug causes drowsiness as a side-effect, and this may be used as part of the treatment, since anxiety depressive patients may have difficulty sleeping, but it can be combined with other drugs such as temazepam.

Side effects


The most common side-effects are drowsiness and dry mouth. Other less common side-effects may include:

Constipation

★ Abnormally large stools

Blurred vision

Tachycardia

Urinary retention

tremors, especially of the hands

★ Blood disorders

Hypotension

Sexual dysfunction

Sweating

★ Increased sensitivity to sunlight, increased vulnerability to sunburn
These side-effects cease when treatment ceases. Alcohol should be avoided whilst taking dosulepin as it may increase some side-effects.
Whilst dosulepin is not addictive, it should not be stopped suddenly as there is a risk of initial withdrawal symptoms which may be mistaken for some of the original indications for the drug:

★ Nausea

★ Vomiting

★ Loss of appetite

★ Headache

★ Giddiness

★ Chills

★ Insomnia

★ Anxiety

Contra-indications


Contra-indications include:

★ Certain conditions of the heart, mainly those affecting the electrical impulses to the heart muscle, particularly arrhythmia or recent heart attack

Mania.

Liver disease or thyroid disease

Epilepsy, phaeochromocytoma, glaucoma or diabetes

Hypotension, vulnerability to dizziness or fainting

★ History of urinary retention or porphyria

Drug interactions


The drug can interact dangerously with vasoconstrictors and should not be taken in combination with phenylephrine or adrenaline in particular.
This drug should not be started within 2 weeks of stopping a monoamine oxidase inhibitor (MAOI) antidepressant, and should not be co-administered with any selective serotonin reuptake inhibitor (SSRI) antidepressant such as fluoxetine), or any medication which affects the electrical impulses to the heart (e.g. astemizole, halofantrine or terfenadine).
The drug is not recommended for use by children nor taken in combination with some other drugs, including herbal remedies.

Overdose


Main articles: Tricyclic antidepressant

The symptoms and the treatment of an overdose are largely the same as for the other tricyclic antidepressants.

See also



Antidepressant

Tricyclic antidepressant

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