Taking Antidepressants Risky During Pregnancy
Women who take specific antidepressant drugs while pregnant may double their baby’s risk of developing a certain variety of heart defect.
Researchers compared the risks of birth defects in 1,370 children born to women who took at least one SSRI antidepressant while pregnant with the risk in 400,000 other children whose mothers had not taken SSRIs while pregnant. Drugs including Prozac, Zoloft and Celexa all significantly increased the risk that a child would be born with a defect in the septum (separates the right and left halves of the heart).
Septum defects may just be minor blood vessel problems at best or at worst this defect may involve holes in the heart. Researchers found that one extra septum defect would develop for every 246 pregnant women taking an SSRI — especially any time from 28 days before conception through 112 days after conception.
Taking more than one SSRI during pregnancy drastically increased the risk of these defects.
