Do neuroleptic drugs hasten cognitive decline in dementia?
Objective: To investigate the contribution of neuroleptic drugs to cognitive decline in dementia. Design: Two year prospective, longitudinal study consisting of interviews every four months, with necropsy follow up. Setting: Community settings in Oxfordshire. Subjects: 71 subjects with dementia, initially living at home with informant. Main outcome measures: Cognitive function (score from expanded minimental state examination); behavioural problems (physical aggression, hallucinations, persecutory ideas, and disturbance of diurnal rhythm); and postmortem neuropathological assessment (cortical Lewy body pathology). Results: The mean (SE) decline in cognitive score in the 16 patients who took neuroleptics was twice that in the patients who did not (20.7 (2.9) v 9.3 (1.3), P=0.002). An increased rate of decline was also associated with aggression, disturbed diurnal rhythm, and persecutory ideas. However, only use of neuroleptics and severity of persecutory ideas were independently associa
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