Windsor Star

SLEEPING PILLS MAY BE LINKED TO DEMENTIA .

- REBECCA SMITH

Sleeping pills may increase the risk of developing dementia, research has suggested.

A study involving more than 1,000 elderly people has found that those who began taking benzodiaze­pine had a 50-per-cent higher risk of developing dementia within 15 years.

In Britain the drugs are used for short-term insomnia and anxiety, but mostly for sedation and for anxiety before surgery. They should only be prescribed for short-term relief but patients often remain on them for years.

Experts said their “widespread use should be cautioned against”.

Academics from Harvard University and the University of Bordeaux carried out a study on 1,063 men and women, with an average age of 78, who were all free of dementia at the start of the trial. Over the following 20 years 253 developed dementia, 30 cases of which were in benzodiaze­pine users.

They accounted for other factors that affect dementia such as age, sex, educationa­l level, marital status, wine consumptio­n, diabetes, high blood pressure, cognitive decline and depressive symptoms.

The results showed that 4.8 out of every 100 people who had taken the drugs developed dementia compared with 3.2 who had not.

Sophie Billioti de Gage, the lead author of the study, wrote in the British Medical Journal that the increased risk of dementia, if substantia­ted by other studies, “would constitute a substantia­l public health concern”.

She said: “Benzodiaze­pines remain useful for the treatment of acute anxiety states and transient insomnia.

“However, increasing evidence shows that their use may induce adverse outcomes, mainly in elderly people, such as serious falls and fallrelate­d fractures.

“Our data add to the accumulati­ng evidence that use of benzodiaze­pines is associated with increased risk of dementia, which, given the high and often chronic consumptio­n of these drugs in many countries, would constitute a substantia­l public health concern.”

Professor Tobias Kurth, who works jointly at Harvard and the University of Bordeaux said: “There is a potential that these drugs are really harmful. If it is really true that these drugs are causing dementia, that will be huge. But one single study does not necessaril­y show everything that is going on, so there is no need to panic.”

Professor Clive Ballard, director of research at the Alzheimer’s Society, said: “This is the not the first time it has been suggested that these drugs could have a negative impact on cognition. With this long- term study adding to the evidence, it emphasizes how important it is that we properly monitor how treatments for anxiety or sleep problems are used.

“While the Alzheimer’s Society is leading the way in calling for an end to the inappropri­ate use of antipsycho­tic drugs for people with dementia, it is also vital that benzodiaze­pines are not automatica­lly turned to as the alternativ­e.

“Instead, we need to empower care staff with the knowledge they need to understand dementia and the person behind the condition.”

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 ?? LUCAS JACKSON/REUTERS ?? Sleeping pills should be taken for only a short period, yet many patients take
them for years, potentiall­y increasing their risk of developing.
LUCAS JACKSON/REUTERS Sleeping pills should be taken for only a short period, yet many patients take them for years, potentiall­y increasing their risk of developing.

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