| Literature DB >> 22034128 |
L L von Moltke1, D J Greenblatt, M K Romach, E M Sellers.
Abstract
The aged are an extremely heterogeneous population that is growing worldwide, included are healthy and agile individuals in their early sixties, as well as an increasing number of people over the age of 35. Pharmacotherapy is expected to continue its prominent role in the medical management of a wide range of conditions that affect older people. Adverse consequences of all kinds complicate the use of medications, and such events seem to increase in incidence with polypharmacy. Cognitive impairment can occur during the course of treatment with a wide range of medications and can have a variety of presentations, Both the number of concurrent medications that older individuals routinely use and physiologic changes in these patients render them more susceptible to developing cognitive toxicity. Most of the frequently implicated medications carry documentation of their ability to cause cognitive disturbances in their package labeling, suggesting that the level of vigilance for adverse effects during the course of their use should always be high. Such caution can be used to guide appropriate drug treatment of the aged so that clinicians do not need to opt for undertreatment to avoid toxicity.Entities:
Keywords: adverse drug reaction; cognitive toxicity; elderly; risk factor
Year: 2001 PMID: 22034128 PMCID: PMC3181655
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Dialogues Clin Neurosci ISSN: 1294-8322 Impact factor: 5.986