Long-term use of certain anti-depressants have been linked to dementia in a large British study, researchers said on Thursday, though they could not definitively conclude that the drugs were the cause. The study in more than 300,000 people in Britain found that those diagnosed with dementia were almost a third more likely to have been prescribed so-called anticholinergic medicines to treat depression and certain bladder conditions between four and 20 years earlier.
"What we don't know for sure is whether the medication is the cause" of the dementia, said George Savva from the University of East Anglia's School of Health Science. He had co-authored the study in the BMJ medical journal. "It could be that these medications are being prescribed for very early symptoms indicating the onset of dementia."
Anticholinergic drugs block certain nerve impulses to reduce spasms of the bladder muscles, for example, and to ease depression symptoms or Parkinson's Disease. Anticholinergic anti-depressants include Amitriptyline, Dosulepin, and Paroxetine, said the researchers who had compared the medical records of 40,770 dementia patients over 65 to those of 283,933 people without dementia. "More than 50 million people worldwide are affected by dementia and this number is estimated to be 132 million by 2050," Savva said in a statement. "Developing strategies to prevent dementia is therefore a global priority." The study results suggested a "potential preventative approach" that demands further investigation.
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