Mirtazapine isn’t your typical SSRI—and that’s exactly why it can be useful in the right context.
✅ When to consider mirtazapine:
- Depression with insomnia
- Poor appetite or weight loss
- Concern about sexual side effects
- Patients struggling with GI intolerance to SSRIs
⚠️ When to avoid it:
- Obesity or metabolic syndrome
- Risk of daytime sedation
- Orthostatic hypotension history
Mechanistically, it’s a noradrenergic and specific serotonergic antidepressant (NaSSA). It works via alpha-2 autoreceptor blockade, enhancing 5-HT1A transmission while avoiding 5-HT2/3 activity—translating to fewer GI and sexual side effects.
💡 Pro tip:
Sedation is dose-dependent and paradoxical:
Lower doses (7.5–15 mg) = more sedation
Higher doses (30–45 mg) = less sedation
In short, mirtazapine shines in cases where sleep, appetite, or tolerability limit other antidepressants—but use it strategically.
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