If you are referring to the efficacy as anti-depressants, there is no definitive answer, each manufacturer studies shows their product to be superior to competitors. It is believed that Escitalopram (US: Lexapro, EU: Cipralex) and Paroxetine (US: Paxil, EU: Seroxat) are very powerful.
If you are referring to receptor binding potency, then studies in rats show that the strongest SSRIs are Paroxetine and Sertraline. http://www.preskorn.com/books/ssri_s3.html
the strongest mineral is the diamond, actually the strongest mineral is the quartz and the strongest rock is diamond
there is no strongest rubber
water clone is the strongest
walnut is the hardest and strongest kind of wood
Strongest = validissimus There are several possible choices for strongest -the context is all-important.
Lamictal (lamotrigine) is not an SSRI. It is an anti-convulsant.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SSRI#List_of_SSRIs
no... celexa is an ssri antidepressant and no relation to benodiazepines
Yes - it is a very common side effect of SSRI medication.
no
SSRI stands for Selective Serotonin Reuptake Inhibitor. A group of anti dipressants SSRI stands for Secure Storage and Retrieval of Information.
Yes
Yes. Lamictal is a mood stabilizer and paxil is an ssri (anti-depressant). Lamactil is often prescribed with SSRI's to "boost" the effect and/or work on areas that the SSRI does not tap. Obviously, an MD/Psych is the best person to talk to about drug interactions, not the internet.
An antidepressant of the SSRI type
Technically yes, but it's not only a SSRI. It is also considered a SNRI because it acts on norepinephrine as well as serotonin.
no. it is an SSRI drug.
ssri s