Hey James, cant say for sure without calling multiple insurance companies who it even was. I think ill mention it to the me (while i have the bar code) and see what he says. It doesnt seem like it should be too much of an issue, and i think it was actually closer to 2006/07. Thanks
One point to keep in mind relative to doctor's and insurance files.... Just about everything, good and bad, is in a discoverable database somewhere. Which is why many on this forum do suggest the appropriate declaration of the event, condition, or medication to the FAA along with any/all required documentation to satisfy the FAA's curiosity.
If you bend an airplane or a person while exercising your pilot privileges, someone is going to go digging in those databases. If what they find items already declared, it's a yawn and the move on. If they find a "not allowed" item that wasn't declared, buzzards and red lights go off and your situation went from manageable to difficult, and now your certificate is at risk of being yanked...permanently.
This is why I disagree with what Paulie said in post #2 about "don't volunteer" the information.
I would reach out to Dr. Bruce Chien,
www.aeromedicaldoc.com,
hire him as your consultant and advocate, and find out what the prescribing doc needs to write up to explain what he prescribed and why. Even better if Dr. Bruce can provide a plain worded template for that letter.
Dr. Bruce has shared with us that if the correct and accurate information is bent into the shape that the FAA expects and accepts, then the chance of a positive outcome is increased.
So if you hire Dr. Bruce, get his assistance working with your PCP, get the right info in the right form from the PCP, then telling the FAA about the amitriptyline could become a much simpler event for the long term than if you ignored it or didn't hire Dr. Bruce.