Antidepressants = Clenched Jaws?

"http://www.thebostonchannel.com/newscenter5/1490472/detail.html

Has anyone every heard of this before?

If so, what is it about SSRI’s that would cause it?

I’ve been a horrible teeth grinder for the past 7-8 years, which is around the same time I started on Zoloft…:confused:

Interesting . . . I take Effexor, which is an antidepressant but not, strictly speaking, an SSRI. (It inhibits reuptake of both serotonin and norepinehprine.) My wife says I grind my teeth a lot in my sleep, and I often have a sore jaw.

Pfizer (the manufacturer) doesn’t even know why Zoloft works for depression and anxiety, much less why it causes unintended side effects:

It should come as no surprise that any drug that messes around with the brain’s neurotransmitters should cause any number of bizarre reactions throughout the body. Why they have become accepted as the first line of treatment for any kind of depression can only be attributed to naked greed on the part of pharmaceutical and insurance companies.

It is nice - but not necessary - to understand the bio-mechanics of a drug. The fact that it is reasonably safe and reasonably effective is enough. The reason that anti-depressants are so popular is that they are much better than the alternatives of (a) being depressed or (b) going to counseling for years and years and still being depressed.

I apologize if this sends us off into GD.

Here’s the list of side-effects of Zoloft
Zoloft Side Effects (Medscape) .

It says