SSRIs and other antidepressants
linked to higher carotid intima media thickness
Antidepressant use has been linked to thicker arteries,
possibly contributing to the risk of heart disease and stroke, in a study of twin
veterans. The data was presented Tuesday, April 5 at the American College of Cardiology
60th Annual Scientific Session.
Depression can heighten the risk for heart disease, but the effect of antidepressant
use revealed by the study is separate and independent from depression itself,
says first author Amit Shah, M.D., a cardiology fellow at Emory University School
of Medicine. The data suggest that antidepressants may combine with depression
for a negative effect on blood vessels, he says. Shah is a researcher working
with Viola Vaccarino, M.D., Ph.D., chair of the Department of Epidemiology at
Emory's Rollins School of Public Health.
The study included 513 middle-aged male twins who both served in the U.S. military
during the Vietnam War. Twins are genetically the same but may be different when
it comes to other risk factors such as diet, smoking and exercise, so studying
them is a good way to distill out the effects of genetics, Shah says.
Researchers measured carotid intima-media thickness by ultrasound. Among the
59 pairs of twins where only one brother took antidepressants, the one taking
the drugs tended to have higher carotid intima-media thickness (IMT), even when
standard heart disease risk factors were taken into account. The effect was seen
both in twins with or without a previous myocardial infarction or stroke. A higher
level of depressive symptoms was associated with higher IMT only in those taking
antidepressants.
"One of the strongest and best-studied factors that thickens someone's
arteries is age, and that happens at around 10 microns per year," Shah says.
"In our study, users of antidepressants see an average 40 micron increase
in IMT, so their carotid arteries are in effect four years older."
Antidepressants' effects on blood vessels may come from changes in serotonin,
Shah says. The most commonly prescribed antidepressants are selective serotonin
reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs) such as fluoxetine, which increase the level of serotonin
in the brain. Other types of antidepressants also affect serotonin levels, and
antidepressants can act on other multi-functional brain chemicals such as norepinephrine.
In the study, researchers saw higher carotid IMT in both participants who used
SSRIs (60 percent of those who took antidepressants) and those who used other
types of antidepressants.
Most of the serotonin in the body is found outside the brain, especially in
the intestines, Shah notes. In addition, serotonin is stored by platelets, the
cells that promote blood clotting, and is released when they bind to a clot. However,
serotonin's effects on blood vessels are complex and act in multiple ways. It
can either constrict or relax blood vessels, depending on whether the vessels
are damaged or not.
"I think we have to keep an open mind about the effects of antidepressants
on neurochemicals like serotonin in places outside the brain, such as the vasculature.
The body often compensates over time for drugs' immediate effects," Shah
says. "Antidepressants have a clinical benefit that has been established,
so nobody taking these medications should stop based only on these results. This
isn't the kind of study where we can know cause and effect, let alone mechanism,
and we need to see whether this holds up in other population groups."
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