Published
I was speaking of the use of amitriptyline and trazadone in the acute setting for short-term use. To date, I have not seen patients sent home with prescriptions for either of these meds for use as a PRN sleep aid. It would be dangerous to overdose on Ambien, trazadone, amitriptyline, Benadryl, Tylenol PM, or any other sleep aid, for that matter.
I don't have prescriptive privileges; I don't get to decide what prescriptions a patient leaves with! :)
Any depression pt is a high OD risk. Back when I worked ER we would get a lot of OD's. Most were treated with Ipacac, followed, after vomiting, with activated charcoal in citrate of magnesia. Most would then seem stable so they were sent where they could be observed overnight and given a psych consult. Amitriptyline OD's were sent to the ICU and put on a heart monitor overnight.
Any depression pt is a high OD risk. Back when I worked ER we would get a lot of OD's. Most were treated with Ipacac, followed, after vomiting, with activated charcoal in citrate of magnesia. Most would then seem stable so they were sent where they could be observed overnight and given a psych consult. Amitriptyline OD's were sent to the ICU and put on a heart monitor overnight.
Amytriptyline can cause heart palpitations even in non-OD situations if it's stacked on top of an SSRI, as well. I was given it as adjuvant chronic pain therapy and ended up in the ER as I was also taking Lexapro, Bextra, and Xanax...
goodknight
164 Posts
Hello,
I have a patient in clinical tomorrow on two antidepressants, Prozac and Desyril. The Desyril is PRN, Prozac is daily.
Can someone explain the rational of a PRN antidepressant to me? I have no psych knowledge (I'm in 2nd semester, that's covered in 3rd).
What type of patient can I expect with these meds?
I searched on the internet and in my drug books but didn't find anything useful.
Thanks,
Jessica