Chemical structure of fluoxetine
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Fluoxetine

Fluoxetine hydrochloride is an antidepressant drug used medically in the treatment of depression, obsessive-compulsive disorder, bulimia nervosa, premenstrual dysphoric disorder and panic disorder. Fluoxetine is also used (off-label) to treat many other conditions, such as ADHD. more...

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It is sold under the brand names Prozac®, Symbyax® (compounded with olanzapine), Sarafem®, Fontex® (Sweden), Foxetin® (Argentina), Ladose® (Greece), Fluctin® (Austria, Germany), Prodep® (India), Fludac*® (India) and Lovan® (Australia). Fluoxetine was derived from diphenhydramine, an antihistamine found to inhibit reuptake of the neurotransmitter serotonin.

Compared to other popular selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors, fluoxetine has a strong energizing effect. This makes fluoxetine highly effective in treatment of clinical depression cases where symptoms like depressed mood and lack of energy prevail. Although stimulating, it is also approved for a variety of anxiety disorders, including panic disorder and obsessive compulsive disorder.

Eli Lilly's Prozac was approved by the FDA on December 29, 1987 and introduced in the US at the beginning of 1988. The drug became very popular, with millions around the world having taken the medication. In the fall of 2001, Eli Lilly lost a patent dispute with Barr Laboratories and now fluoxetine hydrochloride is manufactured by many companies.

Uses

Approved

Fluoxetine hydrochloride is approved in the United States to treat depression, obsessive-compulsive disorder, bulimia nervosa, premenstrual dysphoric disorder and panic disorder. In the United Kingdom, it is approved to treat depression with or without anxiety, bulimia nervosa, and obsessive-compulsive disorder.

In December 2003 the FDA approved Symbyax® to treat bipolar depression. Symbyax is a combination of fluoxetine and olanzapine. (However, the pure form of fluoxetine can cause mania, mixed-states, rapid cycling and psychosis in bipolar patients, particularly if the patient is not also taking a mood stabilizer.)

Unapproved/Off-label/Investigational

In 2003, Michel Harper, Fukodome Takayasu, and Andrew G. Engel reported that fluoxetine given over a period of three years at doses of up to 80-120 mg/day to two patients with slow-channel congenital myasthenic syndrome who were allergic to quinidine resulted in substantial subjective and objective improvement in muscle strength.

Mechanism of action

Recent research indicates that fluoxetine may increase the production of new neurons (brain cells) in adult brain (adult neurogenesis), and that it interacts with the system of "clock genes", the transcription factors involved in drug abuse and possibly obesity ,.

Read more at Wikipedia.org


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Once-Weekly Fluoxetine - Brief Article
From Family Pratice News, 2/15/01

An enteric-coated, once-weekly formulation of fluoxetine prevented relapse of depression significantly more often than placebo during continuation treatment, said Dr. Mark E. Schmidt and his colleagues at Lilly Research Laboratories, Indianapolis.

Patients with at least a 4-week episode of moderate depression who had responded to a 13-week course of 20 mg of fluoxetine daily were randomized to receive 90 mg of fluoxetine once weekly, 20 mg of fluoxetine daily or a placebo daily for 25 weeks (J. Clin. Psychiatry 61[11]: 851-57, 2000).

Treated patients relapsed significantly less than patients on placebo. Thirty-seven percent of the 190 patients on 90 mg of fluoxetine relapsed, compared with 26% of the 189 patients on 20 mg of fluoxetine and 50% of the 122 patients on placebo in the multicenter, double-blind study The relapse rates did not differ significantly between the two treatment groups.

Gastric discomfort was reported significantly less often in patients taking the 90-mg formulation, which delays the peak plasma concentration of fluoxetine by 2 hours, compared with the immediate delivery tablets.

COPYRIGHT 2001 International Medical News Group
COPYRIGHT 2001 Gale Group

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