Studying the Effect of Sertraline in Reducing Aggressive Behavior in Patients with Major Depression

Farnam, Alireza and MehrAra, Arezoo and Dadashzadeh, Hossein and Chalabianlou, Golamreza and Safikhanlou, Salman (2017) Studying the Effect of Sertraline in Reducing Aggressive Behavior in Patients with Major Depression. Advanced Pharmaceutical Bulletin, 7 (2). pp. 275-279. ISSN 2228-5881

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Abstract

Purpose: Depression causes dysfunction in various spheres of individual and social life, which is now considered as the fourth-leading cause of the global disease burden. Given that violence and aggression associated with depression in the community cause serious damage to the family, the prediction, early detection and effective treatment of aggressive and violent behavior are essential. The present study compared the severity of aggression before and after treatment with sertraline in patients with major depression.

Methods: This is an intervention type study and the study population consisted of patients with depression and aggression. The sampling included 23 eligible patients. Data were obtained by SCID-I, SCID-II, STAXI-II, BDI-II and was also analyzed using SPSS 23 software.

Results: The results showed that depression, anger mood, desire to verbally express anger, controlling anger and anger control before treatment was reduced but the desire for physical expression of anger increased.

Conclusion: Obtained results in this research support the effect of Sertraline on reduction of severity of depression, reduction of severity of symptoms of aggression and anger (state of anger, anger feeling, and the tendency to express anger verbally), increased controlling external anger and significantly controlling internal anger. Hence, Sertraline can be found effective in the treatment of patients with depression and aggressive behaviors. Also Sertraline increases tend to cause physical representation of anger, then this issue supports the increase in the euthanasia behavior in primary days of treatment with SSRI that requires more assessments.

Item Type: Article
Subjects: Asian STM > Medical Science
Depositing User: Managing Editor
Date Deposited: 17 Apr 2023 04:56
Last Modified: 04 May 2024 04:34
URI: http://journal.send2sub.com/id/eprint/1223

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