cross-posted from: https://lemmy.world/post/26326122

New research suggests that certain antidepressants can accelerate cognitive decline in people with dementia. At the same time, some drugs appear to be less harmful than others, which can help doctors make better treatment decisions, according to the study.

  • @Metz
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    77 hours ago

    escitalopram

    Of course. The one and only that seems to work for me. Great.

  • anon6789
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    88 hours ago

    Direct Link to the Paper

    The Discussion portion of the paper was pretty interesting. It doesn’t jump to any conclusions, emphasizing not confusing correlation and causation. It discusses some limitations to what they were able to learn and that the severity of the impact is relative to the severity of both the depression and the dementia.

    Being on escitalopram has still been one of the best things in my life. I don’t know if I want to experiment with that. If I’m going to be getting dementia, I’m not sure if getting it slightly sooner or later is going to make much of a difference to me. It’s working for what I definitely do have now though.

    With the administration discussing getting rid of access to SSRIs, I’ve been trying to build up a few months backup supply, so I don’t want to experiment with finding something new that works as well and potentially be caught with nothing at some point. Life right now is already maxxing out how much depression it can help me deal with. 😱

  • Nougat
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    2210 hours ago

    I wouldn’t make it to the point where I had dementia without antidepressants, so there’s that.

  • @[email protected]
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    1510 hours ago

    We have a raging family debate about this going on right now. My brother is an expert in this field. My mom is on escitalopram.

    The SSRI escitalopram was associated with the fastest cognitive decline, followed by the SSRIs citalopram and sertraline.

    • @RedditsuxOP
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      410 hours ago

      Boy that would some family debate. What’s holding her back from switching to others suggested here?

      • @[email protected]
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        810 hours ago

        Well, the fact that its a relatively new debate. Also, this is a new article to me. My brother works in the pharmaceutical field as a scientist and medical liaison. He says Trintellex is what she probably needs, seeing as cita/escita are a bad mix with alcohol.

        • Limerance
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          18 hours ago

          cita/escita are a bad mix with alcohol

          How bad though?

            • Limerance
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              18 hours ago

              Sure. What’s the mechanism of the adverse effects? Alcohol is always bad. Is it just extra taxing on the liver? Or is something specific going on?

              • @RedditsuxOP
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                27 hours ago

                Neuro scientists say any amount of alcohol is bad for the brain. My understanding is that alcohol damages dendrites and synapses in the brain.

  • @AbouBenAdhem
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    1711 hours ago

    Key paragraph, for anyone wondering which specific drugs are implicated:

    The study also points to differences between different drugs. The SSRI [selective serotonin reuptake inhibitor] escitalopram was associated with the fastest cognitive decline, followed by the SSRIs citalopram and sertraline. Mirtazapine, which has a different mechanism of action, had less negative cognitive impact than escitalopram.

  • @SolidShake
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    17 hours ago

    So you’re telling me I can be happy finally but at the same time die not knowing what anything is going on around me? Sign me up.

    • @Maalus
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      27 hours ago

      Antidepressants aren’t about making people happy. Happy pills don’t exist.