If you have taken more agomelatine than the dosage recommended by the doctor who prescribed it to you, you must get medical help immediately – even if you do not feel any different.
As part of depression, some people think about hurting themselves or develop suicidal feelings. Antidepressant medication will not stop this. You must get urgent help if you are having these sorts of thoughts. Speak to someone about it or go straight to hospital with your tablets.
Some people may find that thoughts of hurting themselves or taking their own lives get worse in the first few weeks after starting to take agomelatine. You must go straight to hospital with your tablets if you have any of these thoughts.
Agomelatine can sometimes cause other serious side effects, including allergic reactions (symptoms include: difficulty breathing, swelling of your face or throat, and itching skin lumps) and damage to your liver (dark urine, light-coloured poo, yellowing of the skin and eyes, pain in the upper-right belly, and sudden and unexplained tiredness). Go to a hospital with your medication straight away if you get any of these symptoms.
Stopping agomelatine suddenly is unlikely to cause unpleasant withdrawal symptoms, but you may become unwell again. Go to your doctor if you want to stop or are thinking of stopping.
Agomelatine is a fairly new medicine, so there is still very little information about the safety of taking it while pregnant, but there is no direct evidence that it is harmful. If agomelatine is helping to keep you well, then stopping it may lead to you becoming unwell again. Becoming unwell may cause more harm to your developing baby than staying on the medicine. Talk to your doctor or midwife about this and get their help.