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Published byAdelia Jennings Modified over 9 years ago
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Dementia Drugs: Mainstream and Alternative Medicines Susan Kurrle
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Causes of dementia Alzheimers Disease Vascular Dementia “Mixed” Dementia (Alzheimers Disease and Vascular Dementia) Dementia with Lewy Bodies Frontotemporal Dementia Parkinsons Disease with Dementia Others
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The role of medications in the management of dementia 1.Cure disease 2.Prevent disease or delay onset 3.Slow progression of disease 4.Treat primary symptoms eg memory 5.Treat secondary symptoms eg depression, hallucinations
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Jean’s medication Vitamin E Donepezil Ginkgo biloba Lemon balm Memantine Sertraline Risperidone
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The role of medications in the management of dementia 1.Cure 2.Prevent disease or delay onset 3.Slow progression 4.Treat primary symptoms eg memory 5.Treat secondary symptoms eg depression, hallucinations
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Medications to slow progression Vitamin E –2 year study of Vitamin E in Alzheimers Disease showing a significant delay in functional decline, and nursing home placement, compared to selegiline and placebo –appears to work through its antioxidant effect –need to watch its use with blood thinning medications
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The role of medications in the management of dementia 1.Cure 2.Prevent disease or delay onset 3.Slow progression 4.Treat primary symptoms eg memory 5.Treat secondary symptoms eg depression, hallucinations
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Medications to treat primary symptoms cholinesterase inhibitors: –donepezil –rivastigmine –galantamine memantine ginkgo biloba
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Cholinesterase inhibitors these drugs stop the breakdown of acetylcholine which is an important neurotransmitter in memory and cognition all show modest improvement in cognition and function, and behavioural symptoms response: 1/3 improve, 1/3 stabilise, 1/3 have no response do not prevent progression of underlying disease
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Cholinesterase inhibitors donepezil (Aricept) –given once daily, dosage of 5mg to 10mg rivastigmine (Exelon) –given twice daily, dosages of 3mg to 12mg galantamine (Reminyl) –given once daily, dosages of 8mg to 24mg (can also be given twice daily)
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Use of cholinesterase inhibitors need specialist diagnosis of Alzheimers Disease, and a MMSE score of 10 to 24. need to show an improvement on MMSE of 2 points to continue medication on PBS side effects - nausea, vomiting, diarrhoea, dizziness, headache, muscle cramps use carefully if gastric ulcer, heart disease, chronic lung disease present
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Use of cholinesterase inhibitors warn against unrealistic expectations watch for return of insight leading to depression or anxiety stopping of medication: –unacceptable side effects –lack of response to medication –late stages of the disease
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Memantine (Ebixa) glutamate is a transmitter in the brain that is affected by Alzheimers Disease memantine blocks the pathological effects of abnormal glutamate release, and allows better function of the impaired brain indicated for moderate to severe AD trials show slowing in cognitive and functional decline and decrease in agitation in treated group compared to placebo
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Memantine can use with other AD medications side effects - headaches, dizziness do not use in kidney disease or seizure disorders dosage: start with 5mg daily and increase to10mg twice daily private script - not on the PBS costs approx $160/month
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Ginkgo biloba extract from the ginkgo tree (EGb761) taken in doses of 120mg to 240 mg daily anti-inflammatory, anti-oxidant properties trials show modest improvements in some measures of function and memory reasonably safe and well tolerated, but watch for bleeding current trial for prevention of Alzheimers Disease underway with 3000 participants
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Medications under late stage research to treat primary symptoms Huperzine A (Chinese herbal medicine) –cholinesterase inhibitor, antioxidant, possible neuroprotection properties –nutraceutical - 200 to 800 mcg daily Alzhemed –prevents formation and deposition of amyloid in the brain Phenserine (recent poor trial results) –cholinesterase inhibitor and regulates formation of amyloid in the brain
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The role of medications in the management of dementia 1.Cure 2.Prevent disease or delay onset 3.Slow progression 4.Treat primary symptoms eg memory 5.Treat secondary symptoms eg depression, hallucinations
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Medications to treat secondary symptoms many people with dementia develop symptoms such as agitation, aggression, depression, delusions, hallucinations, sleep disturbance and wandering antidepressants: –specific serotonin reuptake inhibitors (citalopram, sertraline)
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Medications to treat secondary symptoms antipsychotics: –typical antipsychotics (haloperidol) –atypical antipsychotics (risperidone) –modest effect on symptoms –watch for side-effects mood stabilisers: –anticonvulsants (carbemazepine)
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Medications to treat secondary symptoms aromatherapy with essential oils: –melissa officinalis (lemon balm) –lavendula officinalis (lavender) –trials showed significant beneficial effect on agitation and improved quality of life –good compliance and no side-effects
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“Alternative” medicines in the management of dementia ginkgo biloba lemon balm - melissa officinalis lavender - lavendula officinalis sage - salvia officinalis –memory improving through cholinergic activity –one small trial showed improvement in Alzheimers Disease
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“Alternative” medicines in the management of dementia curcumin –yellow pigment in turmeric (curry) –anti-oxidant, anti-inflammatory, cholesterol lowering –reduces accumulation of amyloid in mice brains –in Phase II trials in US
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Management of Alzheimers Disease as we cannot currently prevent or cure Alzheimers Disease, the main aim of treatment is to reduce symptoms and to improve quality of life can use multiple medications with different modes of action together or separately across the various stages of the disease medication is just one of many strategies in the management of this disease
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“I am living with dementia, not dying with dementia.”
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