To determine whether selectivity for serotonin reuptake plays a role in antidepressant-associated mania (AAM), we evaluated the frequency of treatment-emergent mania in patients with unipolar depression who received either citalopram, a highly selective serotonin uptake inhibitor, or the adrenergic tetracyclic antidepressants (TTCAs) maprotiline and mianserin, or placebo. Data were collected from post-marketing reports of adverse events, three placebo-controlled trials and four double-blind comparative trials. Of the total 4004 depressed patients treated with citalopram (2482 from postmarketing data, 840 from placebo-controlled studies and 682 from TTCAs comparative studies), 25 (0.62%) had manic episodes. The rate of AAM in the comparative trials was significantly lower in the citalopram-treated patients (1/682, 0.15%) than in the TTCA-treated patients (5/389, 1.29%) (P = 0.03). In the placebo-controlled studies, no manic episodes were reported in the patients given placebo, but one manic episode occurred in a citalopram-treated patient (1/840, 0.12%). The citalopram-treated patients in whom AAM developed were significantly older than those in whom it did not (about 10 years, P < 0.001); gender distribution was similar. In conclusion, despite its limitations, our study apparently indicates that citalopram, a highly selective serotonin reuptake inhibitor, is associated with a significantly lower rate of treatment-emergent manic episodes than TTCAs, which have noradrenergic activity, but a similar rate to that reported for less selective SSRIs. (C) 2000 Lippincott Williams & Wilkins.