Citalopram-Induced Oral Melanotic Macules in a Female Patient and a Review of the Literature
Vasileios Zisis, Petros Papadopoulos, Eleftherios Anagnostou, Dimitrios Andreadis, Athanasios Poulopoulos

TL;DR
A patient developed black spots in her mouth after taking citalopram, a drug typically linked to skin pigmentation.
Contribution
This case report is the first to document citalopram-induced oral melanotic macules instead of cutaneous hyperpigmentation.
Findings
An 89-year-old female developed multiple oral melanotic macules after citalopram use.
Histopathology confirmed melanin-pigmented basal cells and melaninophages in the lip lesion.
Citalopram is typically associated with skin pigmentation, but this case shows oral cavity involvement.
Abstract
Pigmented lesions in the oral cavity can arise from the accumulation of external substances or internal pigments, resulting in black or brown discoloration. The etiology can be categorized as physiologic, reactive, neoplastic, idiopathic, or indicative of systemic illness. Several systemic drugs have been linked to the development of oral and/or cutaneous pigmentation, either by stimulating the production of melanin or by the accumulation of the drug or its byproducts. The medications most commonly associated with this condition include antimalarials, hormones, oral contraceptives, phenothiazines, chemotherapeutics, amiodarone, minocycline, zidovudine, clofazimine, and ketoconazole. The aim of this case report is to illustrate the drug-induced appearance of multiple melanotic macules in an 89-year-old female patient. The patient was referred to the Department of Oral Medicine and…
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Taxonomy
TopicsDrug-Induced Adverse Reactions · Chemotherapy-related skin toxicity · Pharmacological Effects and Toxicity Studies
