DELIVERING HEALTH INFORMATION
YOU CAN TRUST SINCE 1989
Join the enews community - Terms
MEMBER
MENU
Filter by Categories
Blog
General
Lifestyle

Epilepsy drugs make Alzheimer’s and dementia more likely

Reading time: 1 minute

The anti-epileptics that impair cognitive function also raise the risk for dementia by 60 per cent and Alzheimer’s by 20 per cent – and the risk can be even higher if the regular dose of the drug is greater, say researchers from the University of East Finland.

The risk becomes apparent one year into taking an anti-epileptic, the researchers discovered after they analysed two different sets of data, including 70,718 Alzheimer’s patients in Finland and 20,325 dementia sufferers in Germany. The risk is linked only to the anti-epileptics that affect cognitive functions, the researchers stress, although they think more research needs to be carried out into the entire family of the drugs.

The anti-epileptics aren’t used only for epilepsy; they are also prescribed for neuropathic pain, bipolar disorder and anxiety.

(Source: Journal of the American Geriatric Society, 2018; doi: 10.1111/jgs.15358)

What do you think? Start a conversation over on the... WDDTY Community

Article Topics: Cognition, Neurology, Psychology
  • Recent Posts

  • Copyright © 1989 - 2024 WDDTY
    Publishing Registered Office Address: Hill Place House, 55a High Street Wimbledon, London SW19 5BA
    Skip to content