Tricyclic Antidepressants And Marijuana Don't Mix
Q: A Canadian family doctor reports that an interaction between tricyclic
antidepressants and marijuana can produce a life-threatening arrhythmia.
His patient, a 17-year-old boy, had been prescribed 25 mg of
amitriptyline to help him sleep and alleviate some of his depression. A
week after filling the prescription the boy showed up in the emergency
ward with a supraventricular tachycardia rate of 300 beats per minute.
He had been smoking marijuana the evening and night before. The doctor
speculates that the amitriptyline and marijuana interacted to produce
the arrhythmia and cautions against prescribing tricyclic
antidepressants to adolescents who have a potential for drug abuse.
A:Just wondering what medication the boy was on because my doc had me on
Elavil which made my heart beat wildly. So......maybe it was the
anti-depressant. It was really scary because I could not get my heart rate
to slow down after exercising and I do not smoke pot. So.......
Also, I just read that Tricyclic antidepressants do cause heart problems and
even death in some patients. The pot may have contributed to this boy's
heart problem but after doing some research, I believe the real culprit is
the anti-depressant and not