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Alzheimer's Archive
Articles
New concerns about anticholinergic medications
Anticholinergics, a group of medications that includes many over-the-counter and prescription drugs, are well known for causing confusion in older adults. Common medications with anticholinergic properties include medications to treat overactive bladder, such as oxybutynin (Ditropan); medications to treat allergies and sleeping problems, such as diphenhydramine (Benadryl, Sominex, Unisom); and medications used to treat depression, such as amitriptyline (Elavil). It's generally believed that confusion that may develop from anticholinergics clears up when someone stops taking the drugs. But now it appears that the medications are associated with a more permanent effect. A study published online Jan. 26, 2015, in JAMA Internal Medicine linked daily anticholinergic use among older adults for three or more years to an increased risk for developing dementia and Alzheimer's disease.
The study didn't prove that anticholinergics cause dementia; it only found an association between people who take the medications and people who develop dementia. Nevertheless, the researchers suggest that doctors avoid prescribing anticholinergics when possible, or at least limiting the medications to the lowest doses possible. If you're taking an anticholinergic, talk to your doctor about the risks the medication poses, including the risk of falls as a result of confusion.
Why you should thank your aging brain
At middle age, the brain begins to draw on more of its capacity for improved judgment and decision making.
If you forget a name or two, take longer to finish the crossword, or find it hard to manage two tasks at once, you're not on the road to dementia. What you're experiencing is your brain changing the way it works as you get older. And in many ways it's actually working better. Studies have shown that older people have better judgment, are better at making rational decisions, and are better able to screen out negativity than their juniors are.
Although it may take you a little longer to get to the solution, you're probably better at inductive and spatial reasoning at middle age than you were in your youth. |
Common drugs linked to dementia
Medications called anticholinergics are used to treat a host of conditions—overactive bladder, depression, allergies, and Parkinson's disease. They usually aren't recommended for older adults because one of the most common side effects is confusion and difficulty reasoning. Early studies have also indicated that long-term anticholinergic use is associated with an increased risk of dementia, and a recent study by researchers at the University of Washington adds more evidence to support that connection. The results were published online Jan. 26, 2015, by JAMA Internal Medicine.
The researchers tracked almost 3,500 men and women ages 65 and older who were free of dementia. When they matched prescription data for the previous 10 years with the participants' health outcomes, they determined that using anticholinergics was associated with an increased risk of developing dementia. Moreover, dementia risk increased with the dosage of the drugs and the length of time they were used. While people who had taken these drugs daily for the equivalent of three months had no increase in risk, those who had used them for over three years had a 54% greater risk than nonusers.
Music can boost memory and mood
Dan Cohen watches Mary Lou Thompson, who has Alzheimer's, respond to the playlist he made for her. Image: Photo Courtesy of BOND 360 |
By Dr. Anne Fabiny, Editor in Chief, Harvard Women's Health Watch
Diabetes in midlife may hasten dementia in later life
Image: Thinkstock |
If you have diabetes or prediabetes and you need motivation to get your blood sugar under control, consider this: a study published Dec. 2, 2014, in Annals of Internal Medicine suggests that diabetes in midlife appears to age the mind at a faster rate in later life. Researchers analyzed changes in the thinking skills of more than 15,000 people during a 20-year period. The average age at the start of the study was 57. Twenty years later, among people with a history of diabetes, there was 19% more decline than expected. There were even declines, although smaller, among people with a high blood sugar condition known as prediabetes. "We know that over time, diabetes, like hypertension, will cause mini-strokes in the brain that will impair one's thinking and memory. This study strengthens the claim that addressing cardiovascular risk factors like diabetes early may prevent dementia in the future," says Dr. David Hsu, a psychiatrist in the Center for Alzheimer Research and Treatment at Harvard-affiliated Brigham and Women's Hospital. You can lower your blood sugar—and your risk of diabetes—by exercising, losing weight, and cutting back on refined grains and added sugars. 
Understanding food noise - and how to turn down the volume
Remedies for motion sickness: What works?
4 keys to a heart-healthy diet
Understanding exercise heart rate zones
Resistant starch: Can you make the carbs you eat a little healthier?
Harvard study: A couple of daily cups of coffee or tea linked to lower dementia risk
Does everyone benefit from cutting saturated fat in their diet?
How to treat shoulder impingement
Beyond protein: 6 other nutrients that help prevent muscle loss
Advancements in knee replacement: More precise and personalized
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