| Literature DB >> 22690346 |
Clare Walter1, David Ball, Mary Duffy, James D Mellor.
Abstract
A 77-year-old female with recurrent non-small-cell lung cancer presented to a hospital outpatient clinic with tremor, weakness, inability to coordinate motor movements, and confusion. It was suspected that the symptoms were due to possible central nervous system metastases; however, a CT scan of her head was unremarkable. The lung clinic liaison pharmacist took a medication history from the patient, complimented by extra information from the patient's community pharmacy. The pharmacist suspected the rare side effect of serotonin syndrome was responsible for the patient's presenting symptoms caused by the combination of oxycodone and citalopram. The patient's symptoms resolved soon after oxycodone was changed to morphine.Entities:
Year: 2012 PMID: 22690346 PMCID: PMC3368298 DOI: 10.1155/2012/261787
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Case Rep Oncol Med
| Drug | Metabolised by CYP | Inhibits CYP |
|---|---|---|
| Citalopram | 3A4 2C19 | 1A2, 2D6, 2C19 (weak) |
| Esomeprazole | 2C19, 3A4 | 2C19 |
| Oxycodone | 3A4 (to form noroxycodone) 2D6 (to form oxymorphone) |