Diverse dermatological side effects in relation to using psychotropic agents, include the serious outcomes as hypersensitivity and StevensJohnson syndrome as well as milder forms as ecchymosis and hair loss. Whereas hair loss is frequently associated with mood stabilizers, rarely ,it is also attributed to antidepressants. Selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs) which are the first choice treatment for depression, anxiety disorders and obsessive-compulsive spectrum disorders, are the most commonly used antidepressant drugs. Psychiatric comorbidities have been known in many dermatological diseases and their treatment have positive effects on the course and outcome as well as on the adaptation process to the disease. Due to their favorable side effect profile, for comorbid cases SSRIs are frequently used. Here we present a case of hair loss during paroxetine in a 24-year-old male with social anxiety disorder. In this case the hair loss improved after discontinuing and recurred after resuming paroxetine. After replacing paroxetine with sertraline, another SSRI, alopecia did not recur.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.5080/u24955DOI Listing

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