Elsevier

General Hospital Psychiatry

Volume 21, Issue 6, November–December 1999, Pages 408-429
General Hospital Psychiatry

Consultation-Liaison Psychiatry Database (2000 Update)
Part II: Cardiac drug and psychotropic drug interactions: significance and recommendations

https://doi.org/10.1016/S0163-8343(00)00049-9Get rights and content
Under a Creative Commons license
open archive

Abstract

Understanding cardiac drug interactions with concurrent psychotropic prescriptions is essential for the practicing cardiologist and primary care physician, as well as for the psychiatrist. There has been an explosive use of new drugs in both psychiatry and cardiology without widespread knowledge of their potential interactions. The increasing tendency toward poly-pharmacy, the use of psychotropic medications by cardiologists and primary care physicians caring for cardiac patients, and the growth of the aging population present major challenges for the practitioner. Finally, there is a need to have models/paradigms for predicting potential drug interactions—e.g., the Cytochrome p450 schema. This paper describes a method to identify, understand, and codify the interactions between psychotropic and cardiac drugs, a systematic approach for updating this key database and specific cardiac-psychotropic drug interactions. Specifically, this paper 1) details the interactions, 2) addresses the level of their clinical significance, 3) describes the potential mechanism(s) of the interactions, and 4) offers recommendations to the clinician. Since the majority of the original clinical trials, either for cardiac medications or psychotropic drugs, do not include studies comparing these two drug domains contemporaneously, their interactions often become known only with their combined use in the clinical arena, using the patient as “guinea pig,” and through subsequent reporting.

Cited by (0)