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Citalopram (Celexa)

Available as a generic Prescription Savings Tools

What citalopram is

Citalopram is a medication sold under the brand name Celexa. It works mainly on serotonin, one of the chemical messengers nerve cells use to communicate, and medicines that work this way are often called SSRIs (selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors). It is widely used and well studied.

What it treats

Citalopram is approved to treat depression, and clinicians also use it for anxiety and a number of other situations, among other possible off-label uses.

Whether it is a good fit depends on several factors, including your history and what you are working on. As with everything in psychiatry, that is decided case by case.

How it works

Honestly, no one knows with complete certainty how citalopram produces its benefit. What robust research supports is that it helps keep more serotonin available in the spaces between nerve cells, and that this serotonin effect is central to how it helps. The biology is only part of the picture: how much a medication helps, and how it feels, is individual. Two people on the same medication can have very different experiences.

How to take it

There is no single right way to take citalopram; it depends on you and your clinician. Some people start low and increase slowly, others do not, and the timing and the form (tablet or liquid) vary. The plan you and your clinician make together is the one to follow, not a number you read online. A few general points apply broadly:

  • Take it the way you and your clinician agreed. It can be taken with or without food, and taking it with food can help if it bothers your stomach.
  • Citalopram has an upper limit on its dose, partly because higher doses can affect the heart’s rhythm in some people. This matters more for some than others, such as older adults, people with certain heart conditions, or those on certain other medicines, so your clinician sets the dose with that in mind. This is individual.
  • If you miss a dose, ask your clinician or pharmacist what to do rather than doubling up.
  • Try not to stop on your own. Stopping suddenly can cause uncomfortable effects, and your clinician can taper it gently if and when that makes sense.

What to expect

This varies from person to person. Some effects can show up before the benefit does: possible side effects, if they happen, often appear in the first days, while any lift in mood or easing of anxiety usually takes longer, commonly a few weeks and sometimes more. That early stretch is common and tends to ease. If nothing has shifted after a fair trial, that is useful information, not a dead end, and there are other options. As always, this is case by case.

Side effects

Not everyone gets side effects, and many that do happen ease over the first weeks. The lists below are possibilities, not certainties.

Possible more common side effects:

  • Nausea, or other stomach upset, especially early on
  • Trouble sleeping, or feeling drowsy or tired
  • Headache or dizziness
  • Sweating more than usual
  • Changes in sex drive or sexual function
  • Feeling restless or keyed up in the first days

If any of these stick around or bother you, they are worth raising. Send a non-urgent message through the patient portal or bring it up at your next visit; often a small change helps.

Less common, but concerning side effects that could require emergency care:

  • A fast, pounding, or irregular heartbeat, fainting, or feeling like you might pass out, which can relate to the heart-rhythm effect above
  • Signs of an allergic reaction: rash, hives, or swelling of the face, lips, or throat
  • Serotonin syndrome: agitation, confusion, a racing heart, fever, heavy sweating, or stiff or twitching muscles, sometimes after another medication is added
  • Unusual bleeding or bruising
  • A seizure
  • Feeling abnormally high, wired, or irritable, with racing thoughts and far less need for sleep than usual
  • Eye pain or redness, or changes in vision such as blurred sight or seeing rings around lights
  • Headache with weakness, confusion, trouble concentrating or remembering, or feeling unsteady
  • Any new or worsening thoughts of harming yourself

For any of these, use the help options at the top of this page: call 911 or go to the nearest emergency department for a medical emergency or severe reaction, or call or text 988 for a mental health crisis.

When to reach out, and where

For routine questions, side effects that can wait, or how things are going, send your clinician a message through the patient portal. These are part of your ongoing care and are answered in the normal course of a few business days, so they are best for things that are not urgent.

If something feels urgent, you do not need to wait for a reply. The help options at the top of this page are the fastest way to get care: 911 or the nearest emergency department for a medical emergency or severe reaction, or 988 any time for a mental health crisis or thoughts of self-harm.

Questions to ask your clinician

  • What are you hoping citalopram will help with in my case?
  • How and when will we know if it is working?
  • Is there anything about my heart, my other medications, or my age that affects the dose?
  • What should I do if I notice side effects?
  • How long should I give it before we reassess?
  • How will we handle stopping it, if and when we get there?
FAQ

Common questions about Citalopram (Celexa)

At higher doses, and for some people, citalopram can affect the heart's rhythm. For most people this is not a problem, and it is simply why your clinician chooses the dose carefully and, in some situations, may check a heart tracing first. It is a routine precaution, individualized to you, not a sign that something is wrong.

This is individual. Untreated depression or anxiety in pregnancy carries its own risks, and so can any medication. It is a decision to make with your clinician, weighing your situation, rather than a fixed yes or no.

I start with a full evaluation and a conversation about what you are hoping to change, then we choose together. I aim for the lowest tolerable dose that clearly helps, check in as we go, and adjust. As with everything in psychiatry, the plan is built case by case.

References

This page is educational. It is not medical advice, and reading it does not create a clinician-patient relationship with Cognia Health. Everyone responds to medication differently; what helps one person may not help another. Never start, stop, or change a medication without talking with your clinician. If you think you are having a serious medication reaction or a mental health emergency, call 911, or call or text 988. More options: emergency resources .