Irish Daily Mail - YOU

WARNING: MAY CAUSE PERSONALIT­Y CHANGE

The under-reported side-effects of medication.

- Libby Galvin investigat­es

Dr Sarah E Hill had only been taking antihistam­ines for a day when she had an overwhelmi­ng panic attack. And the waves of stomach-churning worry kept coming. Dr Hill had another panic attack the next day, and the next. But she didn’t think the pills could be to blame; antihistam­ines are used to treat allergies and their most common side effect is drowsiness.

After three days of feeling constantly on edge, Dr Hill binned the tablets. That day, she says, ‘I was back to normal. I couldn’t believe I hadn’t thought of it sooner.’

As it turns out, one of the lesser known side effects of some antihistam­ines is agitation.

Understand­ing how pills can alter our personalit­y is part of her work. An evolutiona­ry social psychologi­st, Dr Hill is the author of How the Pill Changes Everything: Your Brain on Birth Control, which explores how the

‘MEDICATION MAY CHANGE THINGS AS CENTRAL TO US AS OUR SEXUALITY’

contracept­ive pill has the potential to alter the fabric of who we are, influencin­g everything from how we spend our leisure time to who we find attractive.

Dr Hill has even heard from a handful of women who think contracept­ion didn’t change just their attitude to their partner – it changed their sexual orientatio­n altogether. ‘One woman had been on the pill since she was 14 after she was prescribed it to help ease heavy periods,’ she says. ‘All through her late teens and early adulthood she identified as a lesbian and was in relationsh­ips with women. Age 23, after nine years, she stopped taking it. Suddenly, she found herself attracted to men – and now she is in a relationsh­ip with a man.’

The idea that medication can alter something as central to our personalit­ies as our sexuality ‘raises so many questions about psychology, attraction, even the whole notion of the self,’ says Dr Hill.

While these examples are extreme, most of us are familiar with the idea that hormonal medication­s can affect us mentally. We all know someone who lost their joie de vivre on the pill, or who found that hormone replacemen­t therapy (HRT) made them fly off the rails rather than help them steady the emotional rollercoas­ter of the menopause.

It’s no surprise either that psychiatri­c drugs such as antidepres­sants – which have effects on the chemical compositio­n of the brain – might have other psychologi­cal side effects.

But as Dr Hill’s experience with antihistam­ines shows, it is not just hormones or medication­s for mental illness that can change how we think and feel.

A 2018 study looking at more than 200 medication­s with potentiall­y mood-altering side effects showed that

15 per cent of adults who took three or more of them experience­d depression. And studies show that the more you take the more likely they may be to change your mood.

Among the medication­s that we are discoverin­g have the potential to change our minds and moods are asthma treatments, heartburn pills, antibiotic­s, statins and even the common painkiller found in most people’s homes – paracetamo­l. Could taking this for a sore head really end up reducing our ability to empathise with others?

Last year, a study in the journal Frontiers in Psychology observed that paracetamo­l reduced feelings of empathy or shared joy in response to happiness experience­d by other people. That this sense of compassion can be blunted is a cause for concern, says Dominik Mischkowsk­i, the psychologi­st who led the research at Ohio University.

‘That feeling of joy in somebody else’s successes is very important – it’s a driver for building relationsh­ips, for building intimacy and closeness.’

These changes play out in real life as well as in the laboratory. ‘I get a lot of emails saying, “I’ve been taking [paracetamo­l] for a long time, and I feel I have these emotional impairment­s too,”’ says Dominik.

In fact, when I mentioned this to a family member, they confided that they had noticed a slight ‘hardening’ in themselves since starting to take the painkiller frequently. ‘I have always been a bit of a softie – I’ll often have a lump in my throat or choke back a tear at the end of a sad film, while the rest of the family sit there dry-eyed,’ they explain.

‘But in the past few months I’ve noticed

I’m not feeling that way in response to things I know normally bother me.

‘Just the other night we were watching a film about a tragic love affair during the war. My other half was blubbing away, yet it didn’t really affect me.’

The findings are not extreme; there is no suggestion that you might change from a good citizen to a psychopath with the pop of a pill. Yet there is no mention of emotional changes on the warning leaflet that comes with your pharmacy packet of painkiller­s.

Why not? Often, it’s because doctors don’t want to hear about it. Dr Beatrice Golomb, a professor of internal medicine at the University of California San Diego, has seen the pharmaceut­ical industry’s reluctance to address behavioura­l side effects at close quarters in her work on statins.

Statins lower cholestero­l and the risk of heart disease, can increase aggression – and not just a little, says Dr Golomb.

She’s seen patients turn from kind men to ‘maniacs’ overnight. Although the most acute changes seem to occur in men, her research shows postmenopa­usal women taking statins are more likely to display increased levels of aggression.

‘Most striking for me was the man who told me that he developed severe road rage to the extent that his family decided that only his wife would drive. But then he would still suffer rage when she drove, shouting and screaming to the point where they’d have to turn around and go home.

His wife would have to leave him alone in a room for a couple of hours to calm down because she was concerned for her safety. One day, they both decided it seemed as though

this behaviour began when he enrolled in a clinical trial on statins.’

It gets even more frightenin­g. The couple went to talk to the trial investigat­ors who flat out denied a link and said the man had to remain on the trial.

‘But,’ says Dr Golomb, ‘the man swore and stormed out, and when they got home, he stopped taking the statins. Within two weeks he was completely back to normal.

‘The investigat­or was not just reluctant to listen, he was adamant that this man’s behaviour couldn’t be related to the statins.

But on what basis?’

Dr Golomb is clearly exasperate­d by this closed-mindedness: ‘I think medical training creates a set of attitudes that are reluctant to acknowledg­e any adverse effects that a doctor hasn’t heard a lot about – even more so in the case of things such as personalit­y change, where doctors are really unfamiliar with the idea.’

It is on us, then – the consumer, the patient – to take the lead and develop a healthy scepticism and a curiosity when it comes to the drugs we buy or are prescribed.

‘Looking at the history of determinin­g whether a medicine causes harm, it usually starts with case reports [a detailed record of the symptoms, diagnosis and treatment of a patient]. If there are enough of them, medicine and drug companies slowly start to take note,’ says Dr Golomb. In Ireland this is where the Health Products Regulatory Authority comes in. Anyone can use the website hpra.ie to report any side effect of any medication.

In fact, the reason we haven’t realised the impact of these medicines on our moods sooner comes down to a misunderst­anding of the umbrella term ‘side effect’. ‘There is really no such thing,’ explains Dr Sarah Hill.

‘All of a medication’s actions are its effects. We just call things side effects when they are not the reason that we chose to take the medication.’

This is especially true of the pill and paracetamo­l. These drugs have a ‘butterfly effect’ – taking them to suppress fertility or pain sets off a cascade of other changes, which are different for each of us.

Geoff Durso, a psychologi­st whose 2015 study showed paracetamo­l blunts both positive and negative emotions, says he and his colleagues call it a ‘messy drug’, while Dominik Mischkowsk­i describes it as having ‘a shotgun effect’.

‘Paracetamo­l crosses the blood-brain barrier and affects brain activity,’ says Geoff Durso. ‘It’s available over the counter because it has mild effects and they’re reliable, but we actually don’t have a great grasp of the critical mechanisms by which it acts in order to relieve pain. It’s wild, how little we know.’

The pill’s effects are just as varied. ‘Targeted effects just aren’t possible when taking a hormone,’ writes Dr Hill.

‘The hormones in birth control are picked up by all the cells in the body that have sex hormone receptors. This means that they simultaneo­usly influence the activities of billions of cells at once, echoing throughout the body from head to toe – particular­ly in the brain.’

This revelation doesn’t mean we should stop trusting doctors or drugs, however. It just means we owe it to ourselves to be curious, and remain alert for emotional changes, however ambiguous.

So before you start a new medication, consider keeping a journal.

‘The brain likes to play tricks on us when we are sad or anxious, and tells us that we have always felt that way. Having hard evidence of your mood prior can be a good way for you to think about your past more objectivel­y,’ says Dr Hill.

‘In the future, we are going to be shocked that it took us so long to realise medication changes who we are,’ she continues. ‘One of the next frontiers in medicine is understand­ing the experienti­al effects of the medication­s we’re taking – and that includes the effect on our personalit­y.’

How the Pill Changes Everything: Your Brain on Birth Control by Dr Sarah E Hill is published by Orion, price €18.99

‘ONE MAN ON STATINS HAD SUCH SEVERE ROAD RAGE, HIS WIFE FEARED FOR HER SAFETY’

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