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Amitriptyline Hydrochloride Related Nerve Injury

Official FDA Reports57
Social Media Events1
Active Ingredients
  • Amitriptyline Hydrochloride
Additional Terms for Nerve Injury
  • Nerve Damage
  • Nerve Condition
  • Nerve Dammage
  • Nerve Damage In Hands And Legs

  This report is for all products sharing this active ingredient. For more details, please use our Workbench for research on individual brands like Amitriptyline.


Explanation

The quarterly trend chart illustrates changing levels of adverse events over time. Results from both the FDA Adverse Event Database (AERS) and adverse events extracted from social media by Druginformer are plotted side-by-side for easy comparison.


List of Possible Side Effects Reported

Report Date Dosage Indication Outcome Country Gender Age Weight (lbs)

* DrugInformer calculates alarm using a proprietary algorithm. Alarm should not be taken as an ofiicial signal from the FDA or other regulatory entity.


Social Media Comments From Around the Web

The following are comments from users that experienced side effects while taking Milnacipran Hydrochloride

Elavil

... that a toxic reaction to Elavil at twice the normal maximum adult dose caused a left ventricular cardiomyopathy, congestive heart failure and left bundle branch block nerve damage . My ejection fracti...


Source:" Elavil

View full report on drug related nerve injury

Did the author experience nerve injury while taking elavil?

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Druginformer Identified Side Effects: Chest pain, Bundle branch block, Cardiac failure congestive, Cardiomyopathy, Dyspnoea, Painful respiration, Ejection fraction, Nerve injury

Posted By Anonymous in everydayhealth.com on October 13, 2005 @ 12:00 am

Gave me congestive heart failure I was prescribed 300mg a day for almost 18 months and when I began having shortness of breath and chest pain I was admitted to a cardiac care unit. They determined th...



* Warning: The facts and figures contained in these reports are accurate to the best of our capability; however, our metrics are only meant to augment your medical knowledge, and should never be used as the sole basis for selecting a new medication. As with any medical decision, be sure to work with your doctor to ensure the best choices are made for your condition.

* About FAERS: The FDA Adverse Event Reporting System (FAERS) is used by FDA for activities such as looking for new safety concerns that might be related to a marketed product, evaluating a manufacturer's compliance to reporting regulations and responding to outside requests for information. Reporting of adverse events is a voluntary process, and not every report is sent to FDA and entered into FAERS. The FAERS database may contain duplicate reports, the report quality is variable, and many factors may influence reporting (e.g., media attention, length of time a drug is marketed, market share). For these reasons, FAERS case reports cannot be used to calculate incidence or estimates of risk for a particular product or compare risks between products.