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Alzheimer's 'death risk' brings call for drug rethink

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Published Date: 09 January 2009
ANTI-PSYCHOTIC drugs can double the risk of death among Alzheimer's patients given the medicines to prevent disturbing and troublesome symptoms, a study claimed yesterday.
The findings prompted immediate calls to end over-prescribing of the powerful drugs to elderly people with the most common form of dementia.

Anti-psychotic drugs are normally given to people with serious mental illnesses, such as schizophrenia.
But they are often also used to reduce some of symptoms caused by Alzheimer's, including severe aggression, delusions and agitation.

The drugs are said to offer modest improvements over periods of six to 12 weeks.

However, resorting to the medications to treat Alzheimer's is controversial, as studies have shown they are associated with a range of serious conditions, including Parkinson's-like symptoms and strokes.

Now research, involving patients in Edinburgh, has looked at the effect of giving anti-psychotics to Alzheimer's sufferers over long periods of time.

The researchers, writing in The Lancet Neurology, found that over two years survival rates fell by 35 per cent and after three years the risk of death almost doubled.

Although the National Institute for Health and Clinical Excellence recommends the drugs should be used only in severe cases for short periods, the average time they are prescribed for Alzheimer's is one to two years.

Alzheimer Scotland said it had campaigned vigorously against the misuse of anti-psychotic medication, which is estimated to cost the country up to £8 million a year.



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  • Last Updated: 08 January 2009 9:38 PM
  • Source: The Scotsman
  • Location: Edinburgh
  • Related Topics: Alzheimer's Disease
 
1

DeniseX,

09/01/2009 11:32:14
How many people have the Pharmaceutical companies been responsible for killing?
2

mandyv,

09/01/2009 23:20:04
Smokers have a LOWER risk I believe of this awful disease, not that I am encouraging smoking, I do not want to promote Big Pharma either. http://www.bmj.com/cgi/content/full/326/7398/1057
Enstrom/Kabat study
3

mandyv,

09/01/2009 23:27:15
Smokers are less likely to get Alzheimer's I believe.
http://www.bmj.com/cgi/content/full/326/7398/1057
Enstrom/Kabat study

Tomatoes are from the same type of plant, I believe too, the Nightshade family.

http://news.scotsman.com/alzheimersdisease/Tomatoes--key-to-Alzheimer39s.4273489.jp
Tomatoes key to Alzheimer's cure
Published Date: 10 July 2008
TOMATOES could be used as a vaccine against Alzheimer's disease, after a breakthrough in South Korea.


 

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