Considering how little I know about these topics, I will report
these findings without commentary.
One story tells us that people who are taking statin
drugs for high cholesterol should be aware of the potential psychological
side-effects. In particular, these druge tend to make postmenopausal women more
aggressive and violent.
The Daily Mail reports:
When
you take a commonly prescribed drug for a physical condition such as high
cholesterol, asthma or acne, or even the birth control Pill, you may be alert
for signs of physical side-effects. But such medicines can harbour a more
insidious danger: they may make you aggressive, violently jealous, suicidal or
even homicidal.
This
little understood threat was highlighted this month when researchers found that
taking statins to lower cholesterol and prevent heart problems can make some
women aggressive and violent, reports the authoritative science journal PLOS
ONE.
About
seven million Britons a day take statins and the NHS warns side-effects can
include headaches, nausea and pain in muscles and joints, but in a study of
1,000 people researchers at the University of California, they also found a
link between statins and aggression, particularly in postmenopausal women over
45.
Curiously,
the women most likely to become aggressive were normally more placid than
average. Among men on statins, however, only three displayed large increases in
aggression, says Beatrice Golomb, the professor of medicine who led the study.
Why is this so? Apparently, it's not a very good thing to have too little
cholesterol in the brain suffer certain psychological side-effects:
One
theory is that lower levels of cholesterol in the brain may be to blame.
Studies have shown that violent prisoners are more likely to have low levels of
brain cholesterol.
Cholesterol
enables brain cells to communicate, so behaviour may be affected if it drops.
Professor Golomb says statins raise testosterone and cause sleep problems,
which could tend to make people prone to irritability and aggression.
Evidently, one ought to discuss this with one’s physician.
Also on the medication front, the Daily Mail reports that mixing anti-depressants with painkillers like aspirin and
ibuprofen increases your risk of stroke. Apparently, the risk is greater in men:
Taking
aspirin, ibuprofen and other popular painkillers alongside anti-depressants may
raise the risk of having a stroke, doctors have warned.
A study
of four million people found that those taking the two types of drug were
almost four times as likely to suffer an intracranial haemorrhage than those on
antidepressants alone.
Also
known as a bleed on the brain, an intracranial haemorrhage is one of the main
causes of a stroke and can be fatal.
Men are
at particular risk, the British Medical Journal reports.
British
experts said GPs should be aware of the problem and ask patients being
prescribed antidepressants if they are taking any painkillers.
1 comment:
I have been aware of the problem for a number of years, but not the width and depth of it.
Years ago I was out on Naproxen Sodium for the the fad of that day, "Carpal Tunnel">
I'm not sure now how I pieced it together but one day during what was then a long rural drive to work I became aware of a "road-rage" that was way out of bounds.
I did some low link it to the dose of N.S. taken with breakfast, and when I stopped taking it, the rages diminished back toward my normal.
For years I reported it as an "allergy7" but that began to become a burden, so I quit, and eventually wound up with a 'script of it for a sore shoulder (which was finally relieved, along with the "carpal tunnel" and several other aches and pains by a chiropractor).
I have since put it in the collection of stuff that doesn't work.
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