Can long-term use of SSRIs possibly contribute to osteoporosis?

Posted by dancingtree @dancingtree, Dec 3, 2020

I have been on 225mg venlafaxine (Effexor) for 25 years and I am now 68yo. I was diagnosed with osteoporosis about 13 years ago. I took a bisphosphonate for 5 years. Have been off for a few years now and my numbers went up again. Doc now wants to put me on Prolia. In my research I just read that taking SSRI antidepressants can contribute to osteoporosis. So I am thinking that this drug has given me a bone condition and now I need to take another drug to counteract it? I have tried to get off of venlafaxine a dozen times with very bad side effects. I kept asking my doctors what are the long term effects of taking this SSRI for so long and they didn’t seem to know anything. Also, they said that the severe side effects of going off meant that I needed to continue taking the drug! Anyone have an insight into this situation?

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@quinn

HomeAgainLA,
Would you please check which type of magnesium has helped you sleep? Oxide, tartare, glycinate, orotate, etc.? And which supplement manufacturer makes your magnesium? Unregulated by FDA, so many supplements don't contain what they claim they do.
I can fall asleep but can't sustain it for more than a couple of hours.

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I’m not sure the image uploaded so I’ll describe it. Nature Nade, high absorption Magnesium Glycinate, 200 mg, 100% chelated. I take two capsules at night an hour before sleep time. I chose this on on recommendation from a friend and a lot of reading.

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I have been taking Effexor for about 12 years. I am now down to the lowest dose. I, too, started having bone loss on Effexor and read about the connection. My doctor says there is no connection, but I believe there very much is. I do NOT want to take bone loss medications which can have terrible side effects. I agree that I don’t want to take a medication that creates the need for another medication and on and on. When I wanted to reduce the Effexor dose my doctor said to do the higher dose alternated with the next lower dose for two weeks and, boom, you’ll be on the lower dose. I did NOT find that to be true. I had severe side effects. For me, that just did not work. I, also, was told that the side effects were proof I shouldn’t go off of it. Instead of giving up I created my own plan spending many months to lower the dose and increasing for a day or two if I had side effects. I will stay on the lowest dose for maybe 6 months and very slowly decrease, over months, to get off of it, always increasing back to the next higher dose for a day or two to stabilize before slowly decreasing again. I might take the lower dose once a week in the beginning. I use a two week daily pill container to monitor it. I have a Rx for the higher dose and one for the next lower dose. Effexor is notorious for being difficult to get off of. I listen to my body and don’t allow side effects to get hold of me and haven’t had a problem by always increasing for a few days if i feel the slightest side effect. Go slow and easy. There is no deadline to accomplish this. It has been a very long process, but worth it. All in all it will be well over a year to get off, maybe even two. During that time i had a high stress event in my life and went to the next higher dose again daily. Now the event has eased and i slowly reduced back to the lowest dose. I also started doing minor weight bearing exercises for the bone loss.

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effexor is not in SSRI category. It is SNRI.

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There are research studies being conducted now about low dose beta blockers counteracting the effects of anti-depressants on bone loss

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I asked the psychiatrist who prescribes my antidepressant (Lexapro) about the antidepressant-osteoporosis connection. He says the risk of an antidepressant being a major contributing factor is very low. Still, could contribute, so I have no idea how to evaluate this info.

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@lori5548

There are research studies being conducted now about low dose beta blockers counteracting the effects of anti-depressants on bone loss

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Could you please tell me more about those beta blocker studies? This is news to me.

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Dr Ducy out of Columbia University published a research study on how Prozac leads to bone loss through some hormone that affects brain signals to break down bones. Low dose propranolol reversed this in mice by blocking the signal.

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@sunnyflower

Hello Dancingtree, you are the first person I've ever heard of beside myself, That doesn't tolerate melatonin very well. It has been known to give me insomnia. May I ask what dose of it you are taking? I have only seen it in a 3 mg that is that's the lowest milligram I have seen. And I don't think they are scored for easy breaking in half. I hope your plan works for you. Please keep us posted. I am struggling with the same situation that is osteoporosis. Warmest wishes, Sunny flower

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There's a plant based melatonin branded as Herbatonin by Symphony Natural Health. It's bioidentical to human melatonin. The dosage is low enough for extended use. It's only 0.3 mg.
https://symphonynaturalhealth.com/products/herbatonin-0-3mg

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@llynch17056

I have been taking Effexor for about 12 years. I am now down to the lowest dose. I, too, started having bone loss on Effexor and read about the connection. My doctor says there is no connection, but I believe there very much is. I do NOT want to take bone loss medications which can have terrible side effects. I agree that I don’t want to take a medication that creates the need for another medication and on and on. When I wanted to reduce the Effexor dose my doctor said to do the higher dose alternated with the next lower dose for two weeks and, boom, you’ll be on the lower dose. I did NOT find that to be true. I had severe side effects. For me, that just did not work. I, also, was told that the side effects were proof I shouldn’t go off of it. Instead of giving up I created my own plan spending many months to lower the dose and increasing for a day or two if I had side effects. I will stay on the lowest dose for maybe 6 months and very slowly decrease, over months, to get off of it, always increasing back to the next higher dose for a day or two to stabilize before slowly decreasing again. I might take the lower dose once a week in the beginning. I use a two week daily pill container to monitor it. I have a Rx for the higher dose and one for the next lower dose. Effexor is notorious for being difficult to get off of. I listen to my body and don’t allow side effects to get hold of me and haven’t had a problem by always increasing for a few days if i feel the slightest side effect. Go slow and easy. There is no deadline to accomplish this. It has been a very long process, but worth it. All in all it will be well over a year to get off, maybe even two. During that time i had a high stress event in my life and went to the next higher dose again daily. Now the event has eased and i slowly reduced back to the lowest dose. I also started doing minor weight bearing exercises for the bone loss.

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