Antidepressants and blood thinners combo can increase risk of bleeding: study
Posted Sep 27, 2011 7:25 am.
This article is more than 5 years old.
TORONTO, Ont. – A new study suggests the combination of some blood thinners and some antidepressants might not be such a good idea for cardiac patients.
The study said heart attack patients who are taking blood thinners plus selective seratonin reuptake inhibitors for depression appear to be at higher risk of experiencing bleeds.
Blood thinners are generally prescribed to patients who have had heart attacks; depression is quite common after a heart attack.
But SSRIs, a type of antidepressants, carry a risk of bleeding for users and combining them with other blood thinners like Aspirin or the drug clopidogrel raises the risk significantly.
The study, by scientists from Montreal’s McGill University, was published Monday in the Canadian Medical Association Journal.
The researchers looked at the records of more than 27,000 patients aged 50 and over between 1997 and 2007, and found taking an SSRI and Aspirin increased risk of a bleed by 42 per cent. And taking an SSRI with combined blood thinning therapy — Aspirin plus clopidogrel — pushed the risk up to 57 per cent.