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'Chemical cosh' drug doubles death risk in dementia patients

London , Fri, 24 Feb 2012 ANI

London, Feb 24 (ANI): Dementia patients who are given a "chemical cosh" drug are twice as likely to die compared with those taking other medications, experts have warned.

 

The antipsychotic drug, called haloperidol and also known as serenace, is designed to treat hallucinations in patients with schizophrenia or other mental illnesses.

 

But in thousands of cases the tranquiliser is given to sedate elderly dementia patients to stop them wandering off or becoming confused and anxious, according to mental health campaigners.

 

Haloperidol is also widely used in the UK where about 180,000 dementia patients are thought to be taking the drug.

 

The latest findings is based on the study of 75,000 dementia suffers aged over 65 in America.

 

The study, published in the British Medical Journal, found patients treated with haloperidol were twice as likely to die compared with those taking antipsychotic drug risperidone (resperdal).

 

Those taking quetipaine (seroquel) also had a reduced risk. Antipsychotic drugs, dubbed a "chemical cosh" due to their effects, are thought to contribute to the premature deaths of 1,800 patients a year.

 

The study also showed haloperidol was strongest in the first 40 days of treatment. There were also 6,598 patient deaths from non-cancer related causes within the first six months of starting antipsychotic treatment - between 2001 and 2005.

 

"Our study reinforces the important risks associated with the use of these drugs and underscores the need to try alternative means of dealing with behavioural problems in older patients with dementia," the Daily Express quoted study leader Dr Sebastian Schneeweiss, of Harvard Medical School, as saying.

 

He added if doctors need to prescribe these drugs then it needs to be of the lowest possible dose and closely monitored.

 

The Alzheimer's Society estimates 150,000 of the 180,000 dementia patients who are taking antipsychotic drugs in the UK have been prescribed inappropriately.

 

Dr Anne Corbett at the Society said: "For the majority, they do far more harm than good." (ANI)

 


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