Older adults should read the labels before buying
over-the counter antihistamines and sleep aids. |
An Annotated Bibliography Linking Anticholinergic Medications & the Risk of Developing Dementia
Evelyn
E. Smith
M.
S. in Library Science, University of North Texas (2012)
When
Shelly Gray and her fellow researchers at the University of
Washington published a study linking the cumulative use of
anticholinergic drugs and dementia in the January 2015 issue of the
Journal
of the American Medical Association Internal Medicine,
this not only confirmed the results of earlier research, but it also excited much
commentary on the adverse effects of widely used over-the counter
drugs. However, this
research is best reviewed in its historical context, which warrants
an analysis of previous studies that have associated the use of
prescription and over-the-counter medications that block the
acetycholine transmitter with an increased risk of developing
Alzheimer's and other dementias. However, physicians shouldn''t ask older adults to throw away their Sominex, Benadryl, and Oxybutynin without coming up with some alternative remedies as well as asking their patients to
disclose all the prescription and over-the-counter medications they
are taking. At the very least, consumers should check to see if the over-the-counter medications they are thinking of buying contain anticholimergic ingredients like
diphenhydramine before purchasing an antihistamine to dry up a runny
nose or a sleep aid to get a good night's sleep.
Campbell,
Noll L. & Boustani, Malaz, A. (2015, January 26). Adverse
cognitive effects of medications: Turning attention to reversibility.
[Invited commentary]. JAMA
Internal Medicine.
doi: 10.1001/jamainternmed.2014.7667. {First page only]. Retrieved
from http://archinte.jamanetwork.com/article.aspx?articleid=2091742
Shelly
Gray and her colleagues at the University of Washington School of
Pharmacy have published an observational analysis that equates a
high risk of dementia with increasing doses and long-term use of
anticholimergic drugs. Other studies also show similar results. However, researchers haven't addressed the reversibility of these
adverse cognitive effects (Campbell, 2015, January 26, para. 1).
Admittedly, University of Washington researchers took special care to
reduce recall and protopathic biases while relying on clinical
diagnoses of dementia taken from consensus panels of experts
(Campbell, 2015, January 26, para.2).
But
in addition to recognizing anticholimergic drugs as inappropriate for
older adults, the American Geriatric Association also recognizes the
dangers posed when older adults take benzodiazepines and
antihistamines, so the careful research methods that the University
of Washington researchers applied to their analysis of the effects of
anticholimergic medications on older adults should be applied to all
medications with adverse cognitive side effects (Campbell, 2015,
January 26, para.4).
Campbell
and Boustani acknowledge that their own research has previously found
a link between anticholimergics and Mild Cognitive Impairment after
only accessing one year of pharmaceutical dispensing records and found
results similar to Gray's study, although their research showed a
stronger association between anticholimergic drugs and MCI, raising
the possibility that their adverse effects might be reversed (Campbell, 2015,
January 26, para. 5-6). They thus believed that “it makes
clinical sense to minimize exposure to these medications among older
adults”, even though no evidence—as yet--"supports the hypothesis
that discontinuing improves cognitive ability (Campbell, 2015,
January 26, para 8).
However,
discontinuing these drugs also means that physicians must tailor
treatments to fit each individual patient's needs. While completing
a Randomized Clinical Trial would take the better part of two
decades, clinical interventions might prevent the onset of dementia
within a much shorter time period (Campbell, 2015, January 26, para
9).
Campbell,
N. L. ,Boustani, M. A., & Lane, K. A., et
al.
(2010, July 13). Use of anticholinergics and the risk of cognitive
impairment in an African American population. Neurology,
75(2), 152-159. doi: 10.121WNL.0b013e3181e712ab [Abstract only].
Retrieved from http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2905930/
Researchers observed 1,652
“community-dwelling” African American over age 79 over a six-year
period, who were enrolled in the Indianapolis-Ibadan Dementia
Project, who at the beginning of this longitudinal study had normal
cognitive functioning: 53 percent of this population had possibly
taken anticholinergic drugs while 11 percent had definitely taken
them. Researchers associated an increased risk of dementia with
definite anticholinergic users of 1.46 percent while possible
anticholinergic users didn't increase their risk of developing
dementia. Furthermore, the risk of cognitive impairment increased for
anticholinergic users if their weren't APOE ε4
allele carriers by 1.77 percent.
Carrière,
Isabelle, Fourrier-Reglat, Annie, & Dartigues, Jean-François,
et
al.
(2009, July 27). Drugs with antiicholinergic properties,cognitive
decline, and dementia in an elderly general population: The 3-city
study. Archives
of Internal Medicine
[JAMA
Internal Medicine],
169 (14), 1317-1324. doi:10.1001/archintermed.2009.229. [Abstract
for Free Article]. Retrieved from
http://archinte.jamanetwork.com/article.aspx?articleid=224695&resultClick=3
Researchers
evaluated 4,128 women and 2,784 men age 65 or older from three French
cities, assessing cognitive performance as well as anticholinergic
use at base line and then at two and four years later. 7.5 percent of the participants reported using anticholinergic drugs at baseline.
Women who reported using anticholinergic drug use at the beginning
of the study showed a decline in verbal fluency of 1.41 percent an
global cognitive functioning of 1.41 percent over women not taking
anticholinergic drugs. Men who reported using anticholinergic drugs
experienced a decline in visual memory of 1.63 percent and executive
function of 1.47 percent. Women who continuously used anticholinergic
drugs experienced a steeper cognitive decline than those who had
discontinued their use. Researchers therefore concluded that taking
anticholinergic drugs increases the risk of cognitive decline and
dementia while discontinuing their use decreases their rise.
Accordingly, physicians should reconsider giving prescriptions of
anticholinergic drugs to older adults.
Fox, Chris, Smith, Toby & Maident, Ian, et al. (2014, August 25). Effect of medications with anti-cholinergic properties on cognitive function, delirium,physical function and mortality: A systematic review. Age and Aging. British Geriatric Society. [Abstract only]. Retrieved from http://ageing.oxfordjournals.org/content/early/2014/07/19/ageing.afu096
After reviewing 46 studying with 60,944 participants, researchers found that 77 percent of the studies reported a significant decline in cognitive function accompanied an increased anti-cholinergic load Four out of five studies, however, reported no link between an increasing anti-cholinergic load and delirium while five out of eight studies associated a decline in physical function with the use of anti-cholinergics. An increased in morbidity shown in three out of nine studies wasn't “statistically significant”.
Fox,
Chris, Livingston, Gill, & Maidment, Ian D., et
al.
(2011). The impact of anticholinergic burden in Alzheimer's
dementia. Age
and Ageing,
40 (6), 730-735. British Geriatric Society. Medscape
Multispecialty.
Retrieved from http://www.medscape.com/viewarticle/752637
A
sampling taken from July 2002 to January 2003 of 224 British Alzheimer's
patients, 71.4 percent of whom were women and whose average age was
81.0 years, found no difference in cognitive functioning using the
Mini-Mental State Exam, the Severe Impairment Battery, and the
Alzheimer's Disease Assessment Battery at 6 and 18 months
after adjusting for their baseline cognitive function, age, gender,
and using of cholinesterase inhibitors with and without a high
anticholinergenic load (Fox, 2011, Abstract). This finding
contradicts the finding that the elderly are “particularly
sensitive” to the effects of anticholinergic medications because
cholinergeric neurons in the brain decrease with age while the elderly
are more likely to be taking medications with anticholinergice
effects. Between 20 to 50 percent of the elderly in the United
States take at least one anticholinergic medication, and
earlier studies have implicated cholinergic medications as a cause of
delirium (Fox, 2011, para. 1-5).
Results
Study
participants took a mean 3.64 number of medications, and their
anticholinergic load was 1.1. At baseline, 47 percent of them were
taking cholinesterase inhibitors, but after 18 months, 56 percent
were taking cholinesterase inhibitors, confirming a correlation
between declining cognitive scores and the total of medications these
patients were taking. However, the study didn't show any significant
causal link between Agitated Behavior Scale scores at cognition at
baseline, 6 or 18 months. Furthermore, no link existed between the
baseline anticholinergic load and changes in the MMSE and the SIB.
The lack of effect on the ABS scores might because advanced cognitive
impairment decreases sensitivity or because they any already taken a
sufficient amount of anticholinergic medications over such a
prolonged time period that this had alread effected their cognitive
functioning (Fox, 2011, para. 10-13).
Limitations
The
data set only contained drugs prescribed at a single point in time, so
researchers weren't able to collect cumulative ABS scores. The
research also didn't consider other factors, like
institutionalization, diabetes, hypertension, smoking, and alcohol
use, that might lower the scores on the MMSB. Furthermore, taking
cholinesterase medications may mask the effect of anticholinergic
medications (Fox, 2011, para. 15 & 17).
Researchers,
however, concluded that taking a single low dose ananticholinergic
medication doesn't predict rapid cognitive decline in patients
already diagnosed with Alzheimer's over the next 6 to 18 months (Fox,
2011, para. 18).
Gray,
S. L., Anderson, M. L., & Dublin, S. et
al.
Cumulative use of strong anticholinergics and incident dementia: A
prospective cohort study. (2015, January 26), JAMA
Internal Medicine.
doi: 10.1001/jamainternmed.2014.7663.[Abstract only]. Retrieved from
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25621434
Researchers
associated higher cumulative anticholinergic use with an increased
risk for dementia, so they advise physicians of older patients to
minimize their anticholinergic medication use over time. From 2004
through September 2012, the Seattle, Washington, study followed 3,34
participants age 65 or older with no initial signs of dementia, using
data from the Adult Changes in Thought study in Group Health.
“Computerized pharmacy dispensing data” confirmed cumulative
anticholinergic exposure. Using standard diagnostic criteria, 797
participants, or 23.2 percent of those studied, developed dementia
while 79.9 percent developed Alzheimer disease.
Online Sources Publicize a Link Between Anticholinergic Drugs & Alzheimer's
Try turning to natural remedies before
automatically popping a pill. |
Not
only should older adults avoid the habitual use and high dosage
levels of anticholinergic drugs, but they also shouldn't take any
drugs, including all antihistamines, barbiturates, Central Nervous
System stimulants, benzdiazepines, muscle relaxants, and tricylic
antidepressants that are known to produce adverse cognitive effects
in older adults, or at the very least prescribe the lowest effective
dosage for a limited period of time only after cataloging all the
prescription and over-the-counter mediications the individual has
taken in the last decade. Consumers similarly should look for
natural cures. like using melatonin as a sleep aid, quercetin as a
substitute for antihistamines, and St. John's Wort to treat mild
depression after checking with a physician, or when possible turning
to behavior modification therapy. For example, sleep problems should
first be treated by keeping a regular routine, getting plenty of
exercise.
Anticholinergic
warning. (2015, February 1). Alzheimer's
& Dementia Weekly.
Retrieved from
http://www.alzheimersweekly.com/2015/02/anticholinergic-warning.html
Alzheimer's
& Dementia Weekly provides readers with a synopsis of the
latest research detailing a link between taking anticholinergic
medications and dementia as well as presenting this information in a
video and providing them with a Anticholinergic pocket reference card
(Anticholinergic-warning, 2015, February para. 1).
The
Seattle University study assessing the “Cumulative Use of Srong
Anticholinergic Medications” uses more rigorous research methods, a
longer-follow-up period than earlier similar studies have, and it
also used pharmaceutical records to confirm the findings of previous
studies that had linked a higher risk for dementia with
taking anticholinergic drugs. It is also the first study to correlate
dementia risk with dosage levels as well as the first research that
suggests that cognitive damage caused by taking anticholinergic
medication may not be reversible even when individuals stop taking
anticholinergic drugs (Anticholinergic warning, 2015, February 1,
para. 2).
Because
older adults take over-the counter medications with strong
anticholinergic effects, the study's head researcher, Shelly Gray
urges older adults to share their over-the-counter drug use with
their physicians, even though she also cautions that
patients shouldn't stop taking any drugs without first consulting a
health-care provider. At this point, physicians can find an
alternative medication (Anticholinergic warning, 2015, February 1,
para. 4).
Alzheimer's
Weekly also
identified the most common anticholinergic antidepresseants,
antihistamines, and antimuscrines as well as SSRIs in the study:
- Tricyclic antidepressants like doxepin (Sinequan)
- First-generation antihistamines like chlorpheniramine (Chlor-Trimeton)
- Second-generation antihistamines like loratadine (Claritin) for allergies.
- Antimuscarines for bladder control like oxybutvnin (Ditropan)
- Selective serotonin re-uptake inhibitors (SSRI) like citalopram (Celexa) or fluoxitene (Prozac) for depression
(Anticholinergic
Warning, 2015, February 1, para. 5)
Although
medications for urinary incontinence are harded to come by than
those for other medical conditions for which anticholinergic drugs
are prescribed, behavior modification therapy can help control this
problem (Anticholinergic Warning, 2015, February 1, para. 6).
However,
if physicians prescribe a anticholinergic drug because it's the “best
therapy”, they should prescribe the lowest effective dosage and
monitor its use to see if it's effective. Anticholinergic drugs are
harmful because they block a neurotransmitter called acetycholine.
In addition to causing memory loss, anticholinergic drugs cause
drowsiness, constipation, the retention of urine, and dry mouth and
eyes (Anticholinergic Warning, 2015, February 1, para. 7).
The
Anticholinergic Pocket Reference lists the following types of
conditions for which physicans routinely prescribe anticholinergic
drugs:
- Allergy cough and cold medicines (antihistamines)
- Anxiety
- Asthma & C.O.P.D.
- Bladder incontinence (antispasmodics)
- Insomnia/sleep disorders
- Motion sickness/ dizziness & nausea
- Movement disorder
- Muscle spasm and pain
- Seizure/mood disorders
- Psychosis (antipsychotics)
- Stomach & G.I. Tract disorders (antispasmodic medicines)
Behavioral symptoms. (2015).
Alzheimer's Association. Retrieved from
http://www.alz.org/professionals_and_researchers_behavioral_symptoms_pr.asp
Physicians recommend that individuals
diagnosed with dementia do not take over-the-counter sleep remedies
and antihistamines, such as Benadryl, whose main ingredient is
diphenhyramine. Diphenhydramine suppresses a chemical that
Alzheimer's also reduces (Behavioral symptoms, 2015, para. 25).
Over-the-counter sleep aids that
contain diphenhyramine include Compoz, Nytol, Sominex, and Unisom,
while diphenhyramine is also a key ingredient in many night time
versions of popular pain relievers and cold and sinus remedies
(Behavioral symptoms, 2015, para 26).
Harding, Anne. (2015, January 26).
Widely used drugs tied to greater dementia risk for seniors. Live
Science. Retrieved from
http://www.livescience.com/49581-anticholinergic-drugs-dementia-risk.html
Recently published research confirms
that adults aged 65 and older who regular take over-the-counter
sleeping pills, antihistamines and over active bladder medications
that produce anticholinergic effects also increase their risk of
dementia, even though they have long known that even a single dose of
drugs that block the acetycholine transmitter
reduces one's ability to concentrate, While researchers at the
University of Washington School of Pharmacy thought this was
reversible if an individual stopped taking antichlinergic
medications, they have now determined that dosage and length of time
taking these drugs greatly increases the chance of developing
dementia (Harding, 2015, para. 1-4).
Up to 37 percent of all senior adults
use anticholinergic medications, and while previous research has
linked them to “permanent cognitive changes”, this research
has failed to take into consideration the fact that physicians
often prescribe anticholinergic durgs to treat early warning signs of
dementia like depression and insomnia (Harding, 2015, para. 5-6).
Shelly Gray and her fellow researchers
analyzed data from the pharmaceutical records of 3,415 senior adult
aged 65 and older who were free from dementia at baseline, but over
the next seven years, as neurologists diagnosed 797 study
participants (or 23.2 percent) with dementia, researchers found
that the higher the cumulative dosage of anticholinergic medications
was over the ten years before a participant entered the study, the
greater his or her risk of developing Alzheimer's (Harding, 2015,
January 26, para. 8-9). Thus, taking 10 milligrams of doxepin for
three years increased the risk of dementia as did taking 4 milligrams
of cholrpehnramine daily or 5 milligrams of oxybutrin daily
(Harding, 2015, January 26, para. 11).
To control for the effect of
anticholinergic sleep aids and antidepressants prescribed to treat
the early signs of dementia, researchers intentionally omitted the
pharmaceutical records of participants during the first two years
before they were diagnosed with Alzheimer's or other dementia
disease (Harding, 2015, January 26, para.10).
Shelly Gray, the head researcher in
the University of Washington study warned older adults not to stop
taking any of their medication without taking with a health-care
provider, but she also asks them to go over the list of all the
prescription and over-the-counter medications they have been taking
(Harding, 2015, January 26, para 12).
Noll Campbell and Malaz Boulaini, who
wrote a commentary that appeared along with the study in the JAMA
Internal Medicine argued that it might be possible to reverse adverse
cognitive effects of anticholinergic drugs if individuals stop taking
them early enough since a stronger association links anticholinergic
medications to mild cognitive impairment than dementia (Harding,
2015, January 26, para. 13-14).
Hughes, Sue. (2015, January 27).
'Strongest evidence yet' links anticholinergic drugs, dementia.
Medscape Medical News>Neurology. Retrieved from
http://www.medscape.com/viewarticle/838788
Even Low Doses Implicated
Moreover,
individuals taking “just the minimum effect dose” for prolonged
period stood a greater risk of developing dementia compared with
those who didn't take anticholinergic medications, even though
research Shelly Gray emphasized, “This is not excessive use.
Many of these agents are used chronically, and chronic use—even
at low doses—would put you in the highest risk category (Hughes,
2015, January 27, para. 5-7).
Because
anticholinergic drugs have other side effects,such as dry mouth,
constipation, and urinary retention, they aren't as popular as they
once were, but physicians still commonly prescribe them, and many
of these medications can be bought over-the-counter (Hughes, 2015,
January 27, para. 8). Even so, the study doesn't prove causality,
because researcher is still based on observational data. Thus, Dr.
Gray adds, “I would say that we haven't proven these drugs cause
dementia, but our results certain reinforce concerns about this
issue” (Hughes, 2014, January 27, para. 8-10). While physicians
and pharmacists are aware that anticholinergic drugs cause
short-term drowsiness and confusion, their long-term effect aren't
so well known (Hughes, 2014, January 27, para. 11).
The
Seattle study followed 3,434 older adults whose average age was 73
years over a ten-year period, tracking their medications from
pharmacy records. Followup examinations added another 7.3 years to
study that screen for dementia every two years. About 20 percent
of the population used anticholinergic drugs while researchers
determined a minimum effective dosage for each drug and then
calculative the participants' calculated cumulative exposure
(Hughes, 2015, January 27, para. 13-14). During the follow up
period, 797 participants (or 23.2 percent) developed dementia,and
79.9 percent of these were diagnosed with Alzheimer's. Taking an
anticholinergic medication, such as Benadryl, every day for three
years put participants in the highest risk category as did taking
the minimum effective dosage sporadically over a longer period or
a higher dosage for a shorter period (Hughes, 2015, January 27,
para. 15-16).
"Very
Credible Data"
Noll L.
Campbell, of the Purdue University College of Pharmacy, notes that
this study provides “the strongest evidence to date that
anticholinergic drugs cause dementia”since the Seattle
observational study furnishes the longest record of medication
history (Hughes, 2015, January 27, para. 17-18).
Campbell
noted that several studies have associated anticholinergic
medications with cognitive problems. He also explained that future
studies would try to understand the biochemical mechanism that
underlies this link since the patients in the Seattle study have
granted researchers the permission to autopsy their brains
(Hughes,2015, January 27, para. 20 & 22).
However,
the next step in research equating the use of anticholinergic drug
use with a higher risk dementia could be a randomized study of
anticholinergic drug users that upon the researchers' request
continue to take them or stop their use (Hughes, 2015, January 27,
para. 23).
Medications to be avoided. (2015).
Frontotemporal dementia. UCSF University of California San Francisco.
Retrieved from
http://memory.ucsf.edu/ftd/medical/treatment/avoid/multiple
The Memory and Aging Center at the
University of California San Francisco while noting medications that
shouldn't be prescribed for frontotemporal lobe patients reminds
physicians, pharmacists, and the elderly that many different classes
of medications shouldn't be prescribed for long-term use, and when
possible all patients should be treated with alternative medications
and non-prescription therapies:
- Anticholinergic medications
- Antihistamines
- Barbiturates
- Benzodiazepines
- CNS stimulants
- Muscle relaxants
- Tricylic antidepressants
Anticholinergic medications
Anticholinergics while leveling out
the production of dopamine and aceycholine decrease acelylcholine
activity, so physicians in the past have routinely prescribed them
to treat incontinence, depression, and sleep disorders. However,
anticholinergic medications also cause acute cognitive impairment and
possible confusion and hallucinations. Additionally, they might
“antigonize” any cholinesterase inhibiting medications (USCF,
2015, para. 1).
Nevertheless, the number of
anticholinergic drugs prescribed and their dosages as well as the
patient's baseline cognitive function and his or her sensitivity to
medications also influence the potency of anticholinergic medications
(USCF, 2015, para. 2).
Thus, physicians and patients' family
members should evaluate an anticholinergic medications as well as
its benefits while coming up with alternatives to control a
condition; for example, with incontinence, they should determine
whether incontinence is functional or urge based and then implement
scheduled toileting, check post void residuals, and reduce the anticholinergic medication, discontinuing its use if continence doesn't
improve within six weeks (USCF, 2015, para 3-4).
Antihistamines
Antihistamines block histamine, a
substance that produces allergic symptoms. Examples of histamines
containing cholinergics include diphenhydramine, including the
over-the-counter brand names Benadryl and Sominex (USCF, 2015, para.
5).
Barbiturates
Barbiturates help patients relax and
sleep, but their continuous use may cause memory loss, decrease
alertness, and diminish interpersonal functioning (USCF, 2015, para.
6).
Benzodiazepones
Observational studies link
benzodiazepenes with memory loss and confusion as well as falling in
elderly patients. When prescribed for FTL disorder patients, they cause
amnesia, hostility, irritability, and disquieting dreams, so if
prescribed, they should be taken for only a short time. Instead of
prescribing benzodiazepones, like Valium, to relieve stress, try
“non-pharmacological supportive strategies”, When used to treat
sleep problems, try increasing physical activity during the day or
taking melatonin, or trazodone (USCF, 2015, para. 7-8).
FTD increases sensitivity to medications affecting the central
nervous system, like Fluoxetine (Prozac), thus impairing memory
and delaying psychomotor performance (USCF, 2015, para. 8-9).
Muscle relaxants
Even though muscle relaxants treat muscle spasms associated with spinal cord injuries, stroke, multiple sclerosis, and cerebral palsy, the use of some muscle relaxants can cause liver damage (USCF, 2015, para. 10).
Tricyclic antidepressants
Tricyclic antidepressants
Instead of prescribing tricyclic antidepressants that may
worsen memory problems and “antagonize” the effects of
cholinesterase inhibitors, physicians should consider
alternative medications that produce the least anticholinergic
side effects (USCF, 2015, para. 11-12).
Mertz, Beverly. (2015, January 28).
Common anticholinergic drugs like Benadryl linked to increased
dementia. Risk. Harvard Health Blog. Retrieved from
http://ww"w.health.harvard.edu/blog/common-anticholinergic-drugs-like-benadryl-linked-increased-dementia-risk-201501287667
A study that the JAMA Internal Medicine issued in
mid-January “offers compelling evidence of a link between
long-term use of anticholinergic medications like Benadryl and
dementia” (Mertz, 2015, January 28, para. 2). Anticholinergic
drugs block acetylcholine, a chemical substance that carries messages
in the nervous system. Acetylcholine transmits messages within the
brain necessary for learning and memory while elsewhere in the body
it stimulates muscle contractions. Thus, anticholinergic drugs
include some antihistamines, tricyclic antidepressants, and drugs
that control an overactive bladder or relieve Parkinson's symptoms
(Mertz, 2015, January 28, para. 3).
What the study found
Tracking pharmacy records for the ten years before 3,500 older men and women became part of the Adult Changes in Thoughts longitudinal study conducted by the University of Washington and Group Health, a Seattle health care system, a team of researchers at the University of Washington's School of Pharmacy discovered that 800 of these volunteers developed dementia. They also found that those who used anticholinergic medications were more likely to develop dementia than those who didn't take take them. What's more, their risk of developing dementia increased with each cumulative dose—taking an anticholinergic drug for three years increased the changes of developing dementia 54 percent compared with those individuals who took the same dosage for three months or less (Mertz, 2015, January 28, para.4).
Since the production of acetycholine decreases with age, taking anticholinergics “delivers a double whammy” because taking anticholinergic medications interferes with short-term memory and reasoning (Mertz, 2015, January 28, para. 5).
The University of Washington is the first to assess the effects of over-the-counter medications as well as “the possibility that people were taking a tricyclic antidepressant to alleviate early symptoms of undiagnosed dementia” since 'the risk associated with bladder medications was just as high” (Mertz, 2015, January 28, para. 6).
The study should also serve as a reminder to re-evaluate the medications older adults are taking to see if they are working as they should be since many medications have a stronger effect on senior adults since their kidneys and livers don't flush the chemicals from the body as they would if they were younger, and since fat and muscle mass distribution changes with age, the way the body breaks down these medications drugs and apportions them to body tissues differs (Mertz, 2015, January 28, para. 7).
What should you do?
Fortunately, alternatives to anticholinergic medications now exist: Selective serotonin re-uptake inhibitors (SSR) like citalopram (Celexa) or fluoxetine (Prozac) successfully treat depression while antihistamines like loratadinne (Claritin) can take the place or diphenhydramien or cholorpheniramine (Chlor-Trimeton). Behavioral modification therapy and Botox injections can alleviate incontinence problems (Metz, 2014, January 28, para. 8). However, Mertz urges patients to clear continuing to take all prescription and non-prescription medications with a primary care physician (Metz, 2014, January 28, para. 9).
Roberts, Michelle. (2015, January 27). Dementia 'linked' to common over-the-counter drugs. Health. BBC News. Retrieved from http://www.bbc.com/news/health-30988643
A study published in the JAMA
Internal Medicine has linked the prolonged use of three or
more years of over-the-counter medications that treat
insomnia, hay-fever to dementia in the elderly to medications
that block a acetylcholline neurotransmitter However,
researchers caution that patients should not stop taking any
medications without checking with a primary-care physician
(Roberts, 2015, January 27, para. 1-6).
Researchers are the University of Washington determined that 797 study participants developed dementia upon following 3,434 adults age 65 or older while also tabulating and analyzing their pharmacy records, including medications that had an anticholinergic effect, although study participants only purchased 1/5 of these drugs as over-the-counter medications:
- Tricyclic antidepressants for treating depression
- Antihistamines used to treat hay-fever and allergies
- Antimuscarinics for treating urinary incontinence
(Roberts, 2015, January 27,
para. 10-14)
The most common anticholinergic drugs treat depression, sleep deprivation, allergies and hay fever and urinary incontinence (Roberts, 2015, January 27, para. 13).
The most commonly used anticholinergic-type drugs were medicines for treating depression, antihistamines for allergies such as hay-fever or to aid sleep/promote drowsiness, and drugs to treat urinary incontinence.
'Not causal'
Researchers concluded that study participants taking at least 10 milligrams a day of the antidepressant doxepin, four milligrams daily of the sleep aid diphenhydramine, or five milligrams a day of the urinary incontinence medication oxybutynin for more than three years showed a greater risk of developing dementia (Roberts, 2015,January 27, para. 15).
Accordingly, researchers urged physicians and pharmacists to find alternatives to these medications or else if no alternative is possible to issue the lowest effective dosage, although physicians will also have to look at brain pathologies (Roberts, 2015, January 27, para. 16 & 18).
The head of research at Alzheimer's Research UK labeled the study “interesting but not definitive” while the representative of the UK's Alzheimer's Society talked about “concerns” that the prolongued use of anticholinergic medications can increase the risk of dementia under certain circumstances (Roberts, 2015, January 27, para. 19-20).
Like their US counterparts, British authorities cautioned against stopping any medications without talking with a GP (Roberts, 2015, January 27, para. 22).
The UK representative for a trade association that manufactures over-the-counter drugs also warned that non-prescription allergy medications and sleeping aids aren't meant to be taken over a long period of time (Roberts, 2015, January 27, para. 26).
Smith, Natalie. (2013, May 22).
Clinical information: The case of Benadryl causing dementia.
Clinical Corrections. Retrieved from
http://www.clinicalcorrelations.org/?p=6162
A six-year longitudinal study, “Use
of anticholinergics and the risk of cognitive impairment in an
African American population”, published in the July 2010 issue of
Neurology
by N. L. Campbell and M. A. Boustani, et
al,
found that taking anticholinergic drugs possibly
raises the risk of dementia slightly after reviewing the cognitive
functioning of 1,600 African American over age 70 over a six-year
period (Smith, 2013, May 22, para.4). Eleven percent or 179
participants definitely had taken anticholinergic medications, so
researchers calculated the ratio for their developing dementia at
1:46. They concluded that data didn't support the hypothesis that
taking anticholinergic drugs increases the risk of Alzheimeer's,
although the study “suggested” that such a link might exist
(Smith,2013, May 22, para. 6).
Steinbuch, Yaron. (2015, January 27).
Alzheimer's risk elevated by such-over-the-counter drugs as Benadryl
and Nyton: Study. Market Watch. New York Post. Retrieved
from
http://www.marketwatch.com/story/alzheimers-risk-elevated-by-such-over-the-counter-drugs-as-benadryl-and-nytol-study-2015-01-27
Bottom Line: Using
anticholinergic drug increases the odds that an individual might
develop dementia, but research at this point in time can't determine
if anticholinergic drugs cause dementia (Steinbuch, 2015, January 27,
para. 12).
Quoting the middle-class, British
tabloid, The Daily Mail, Steinbuch
links Nytol, a sleeping pill, and allergy medications, Benadryl and
Piriton, along with some antidepressants with a small, increased risk
of dementia since these medications contain anticholinergic
substances that block acetylcholine, a key chemical messenger within
the brain. Moreover, they theorized that the risk of developing
dementia increases when individuals take repeated doses of these
drugs over several years (Steinbuch, 2015, January 27, para. 2-4).
Steinbuch thus cautions that primary care physicians should regularly
review their older patients' drug regimes, including any over the
counter medications they might be taking. However, these same
patients should consult their physicians before they stop taking
these medications (Steinbuch, 2015, January 27, para. 5-6).
The study that appeared in the January
issue of JAMA Internal Medicine, researchers monitored
3,434 men and women over age 65 for seven years as they used
anticholinergic medications. During the course of the study, 637
subjects developed Alzheimer's and 160 patients went on to be
diagnosed with another type of dementia. Researchers noted that
those who took the highest doses of anticholinergic drugs had a 54
percent greater risk of succumbing to dementia than those who didn't
take any anticholinergic drugs while their risk of diagnosed
eventually with Alzheimer's was 63 percent higher. Those with the
highest risk of developing dementia took at least 10 milligrams a day
of the antidepressant doxepin, or 4 milligrams daily of
diphenhydramine found in Nytol and Benadryl, and 5 milligrams daily
of oxybutyn in the over-active bladder medication Ditropan for at
least three years (Steinbuch, 2015,January 27, para.7-10).
Williams,
Sean. (2015, February 7). These common medications may put you at a
greater risk of developing dementia. The Motley Fool.
Retrieved from
http://www.fool.com/investing/general/2015/02/07/these-common-medications-may-put-you-at-a-greater.aspx
These medications may increase your risk of dementia
From 2004 to 2012, the Group Health Research Institute followed 3, 434 participants starting at age 65 assessed Adult Changes in Thought in a study designed to assess whether anticholinergic drugs building up in the body lead to an increase risk in dementia and found that this indeed might be the case: 797 participants (or 23.2 percent of study participants) went on to the diagnosed with dementia), although the study didn't provide a control group incidence rate for dementia. Additionally, even when the patients stopped taking anticholinergic drugs, researchers could offer no guarantees that their adverse effects were reversible (Williams, 2015, February 7, para. 6-7).
Anticholinergic drugs are those drugs that block the antilcholinergic neurotransmitter in the drug, helping them treat incontinence, asthma, muscular spasms, depression, and sleep disorders. Examples of anticholinergic drugs included over-the-counter medications like Dramaine, Benadryl, and Advil PM as well as prescription medications Wellbutrin, Zyban, and Unisom (Williams, 2015, February 7, para. 8).
Because of this threat to mental health, researchers urge seniors to share their history of taking Over the Counter medications with their primary care physician as well as asking him or her to prescribe alternative medications to these anticholinergic drugs or if necessary prescribe the lowest possible dose (Williams, 2015, February 7, para. 9). However, they also advise consulting a physician before stopping taking these well-known drugs cold-turkey (Williams, 2015, February 7, para.10).
Some study participants have agreed to let researchers autopsy their brains upon death to see if pre-existing pathologies predisposed these patients to develop dementia, or if taking anticholinergic drugs spurred on the development of Alzheimer's or other dementias (Williams, 2015, February 7, para. 11).
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The links furnished on this Web page represent the opinions of their authors, so they complement—not substitute—for a physician’s advice.
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Home Remedies for Allergies
WebMD
recommends drinking green tea and eating hot spicy foods like cayenne
pepper as well as onions and garlic to clear the sinuses without taking any
medications.
Home
Remedies for Life recommends such cures as taking Vitamin C and eating the fruits and vegetables rich in it, breathing steaming salt water, acupressure,
the use of saline spray, and massaging the temples.