Brief Answer:
Unlikely to be due to
sertraline.
Detailed Answer:
Hi,
Welcome to Healthcare Magic!
I do not feel that your present problems are due to sertraline. Firstly, the dose of sertraline which you are currently on is not too high. We can use doses of up to 200 mg per day if required. Secondly, the symptoms that you have described are not usually seen with sertraline but are very common in menopause.
Night sweats, weight gain, breast tenderness, fatigue, irritability, anxiety, abdominal cramps,
electric shock like sensations etc are all very commonly seen in menopause. The persistence of your
depression may also be due to menopause.
The other thing is that you are on Cerazette which also can worsen some of your symptoms like breast tenderness, weight gain etc. Many women have menses even on progesterone-only
contraception methods like Cerazette, while some do not.
The question is how does one know that one has attained menopause when one is on progesterone-only contracepive pills and therefore, can stop the pill? For women who have menses, it is recommended that they continue the progestogen-only pill (POP) until they are 55 years of age, when loss of
fertility can be assumed for most women. But for those who do not menstruate, two options are recommended. They can either continue the POP until the age of 55 years. The second option is for women over the age of 50 years, one should check
follicle stimulating hormone (FSH) levels on two occasions, with an interval of 6 weeks between tests. If both FSH levels are more than 30 IU/L, stop the POP after 1 year. This is as per the NICE guidelines of UK ( WWW.WWWW.WW uk/contraception-progestogen-only-methods#!scenariorecommendation:10).
The point I am trying to make is that though you are only 45, it is possible that you are going through menopause and you probably do not need Cerazette, which is just worsening your symptoms. If your mother or sister or other female blood relatives also attained menopause at around this age, it is possible that you too are going through menopause. I would advise you to look at your symptoms from this angle as I do not feel that sertraline is likely to cause all this.
Hope this helps you. Please feel free to ask if you need any clarifications.
Best wishes.
Dr Preeti Parakh
MD Psychiatry