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12 Anti-Anxiety Drugs That Become Dangerous When You Get Older

Anti-Anxiety Drugs: Very Dangerous When You Get Older

Tags, Dangerous Drugs, Drug Dangers for Older People, Benzo Dangers, Benzodiazepines, Anxiety drugs, Anti-Anxiety drugs

 

A drug that helped you cope with depression in your 30s, 40s, and 50s, can become a menace to your health when you enter your 60s and beyond.

Too many patients  and too many of the doctors who first wrote the prescriptions may not realize something that was a great help in coping with anxiety and depression threatens  to do great harm when you reach a different stage in life.

Our body’s ability to process and manage medicines becomes less effective as we age.

The category of drugs to watch out for is called benzodiazepines. Medicare Part D is covering these medications for the first time in 2013, and this calls for alertness by both patients and doctor.

These drugs are the benzodiazepines, with generic name first, then brand name in parentheses

  • Alprazolam (Xanax),
  • Chlordiazepoxide (Librium),
  • Clonazepam (Klonopin)
  • Diazepam (Valium),
  • Estazolam (ProSom)
  • Flurazepam (Dalmane),
  • Lorazepam (Ativan),
  • Midazolam,
  • Oxazepam (Serax),
  • Temazepam (Restoril),
  • Triazolam (Halcion)
  • Quazepam (Doral).

They are often prescribed for anxiety, agitation, muscle spasms and sleep disorder.

Here is the warning from the American Geriatrics Society, the specialty group for treating the health of older persons, about the dangers of these drugs for patients age 65 and older: “Older adults have increased sensitivity to benzodiazepines and slower metabolism of long-acting agents. In general, all benzodiazepines increase risk of cognitive impairment, delirium, falls, fractures, and motor vehicle accidents in older adults.

When you get to be 65 and older, these drugs can make you dizzy and precipitate falls, which are a great danger older people.

“Falls can be devastating,” warns the Centers for Disease Control (CDC)About one out of ten falls among older adults result in a serious injury, such as a hip fracture or head injury, that requires hospitalization. In addition to the physical and emotional pain, many people need to spend at least a year recovering in a long-term care facility.”

And falls can be deadly, says the CDC. “Falls are the leading cause of injury deaths among older adults. The rate of fall-related deaths among older adults in the United States has risen significantly over the past decade. In 2004, falls were responsible for 14,900 deaths.”

It’s not just the benzos that pose a potential risk to older people. The process of aging makes the body less efficient at absorbing and metabolizing and eliminating all sports of drugs. Older adults may get many prescriptions from many different doctors. And their interactions may cause serious problems.

The American Geriatrics Society publishes a summary list of drugs that may be inappropriate for older patients.  The advice to doctors is to be extremely cautious  in using any of these medications for their older patients.

 

“This should be viewed as a guide for identifying medications for which the risks of use in older adults outweigh the benefits,” the AGS says.  “These criteria are not meant to be applied in a punitive manner. This list is not meant to supersede clinical judgment or an individual patient’s values and needs. Prescribing and managing disease conditions should be individualized and involve shared decision-making.”

The AGS is saying that the final decision on which drugs to use and when to use them is the business of the individual patients and his or her doctor. But this is some advice from the experts to be cautious.

Here’s the AGS full list of risky drugs for older patients, with the possible side effects and dangers:

 

http://www.americangeriatrics.org/files/documents/beers/PrintableBeersPocketCard.pdf

Older people take multiple prescriptions, and it’s not just the anti-anxiety drugs that can pose a threat. Any medications can give you problems if they interact badly with other things you are taking.

So once a year, schedule a schedule a “brown bag” day with your primary care doctor. Fill a bag with the bottles of all the pills you take, the ones prescribed by the doctor, as well as any you bought over-the-counter, plus the vitamins and the special pills you bought from the health food store, and the magic roots your  or the roots your brother-in-law gave you after his South American odyssey. Have the doctor review everything and then decide what you should keep taking and what to avoid.

And if you want to do a little investigation on your own, try the drug checker

Possible interactions form mixing and matching drugs can be checked here
http://www.healthline.com/druginteractions

The American Geriatric Society’s general advice about over-medication is at:

http://www.americangeriatrics.org/files/documents/beers/AvoidingOvermedicationTIP.pdf

Pharmacies are busy places these days. To make sure you got  the right pill at the store use this  pill identifier to check the size, color and shape of the medication.

Check it at

http://www.drugs.com/pill_identification.html

 

Written by Bob Rosenblatt

Bob Rosenblatt is a researcher, writer and journalist who helps people looking for up-to-date answers and information on the perplexing issues at the intersection of finances and aging. Bob publishes a weekly report — please take a moment to subscribe in the upper right hand corner of this page.

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