Venlafaxine and Sour Date Nut
Ms. A, a 40-year-old Caucasian woman with intermittent depression, consulted a traditional Chinese healer with complaints of insomnia, fatigue, nervousness, and poor appetite for which sour date nut (jujube), 0.5 g/day, was prescribed. She took this product for several weeks, with minor improvement. She was subsequently prescribed venlafaxine, 37.5 mg/day, for depressive symptoms by a psychiatrist who was unaware of her use of jujube.Approximately 1 hour after ingesting the first dose of venlafaxine and jujube at bedtime, Ms. A became agitated, restless, nauseated, dizzy, and ataxic and subsequently collapsed. Upon examination, she was pale, drooling, unable to sit, profusely diaphoretic, tachypneic, trembling, and shivering. She appeared near cardiovascular collapse, with absent peripheral pulses but a carotid pulse of 50 bpm. Her blood pressure was 60/40 mm Hg, her respiration rate was 40 breaths per minute, and her pupils were widely dilated but reactive. Thirty minutes later, her blood pressure was 180/100 mm Hg, her pulse was 80 bpm, and her respiration rate was 14 breaths per minute. Eight hours later, her vital signs and mental state returned to normal; monitoring of her vital signs and supportive physician care were intermittently provided at home over the next 24 hours.Since Ms. A suffered from treatment-resistant depression, she was instructed to stop taking jujube and to resume taking venlafaxine. She was not rechallenged with jujube but took venlafaxine, 150 mg/day, for 1 month without side effects.
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