AI Article Synopsis

  • Dimenhydrinate is an over-the-counter medication used to treat nausea and motion sickness, but chronic high-dose use may lead to cognitive issues, particularly concerning dementia.
  • A case study details a woman in her 40s who abused dimenhydrinate daily and developed a minor neurocognitive disorder along with delusional beliefs, although other health conditions and lifestyle factors also played a role.
  • This report highlights increasing concerns about long-term cognitive effects of anticholinergic medications, which were previously thought to primarily affect older adults.

Article Abstract

Dimenhydrinate is an over-the-counter antihistaminergic medication with anticholinergic properties used to treat nausea or motion sickness worldwide. There is a well-established correlation between the use of anticholinergic medications and dementia, however, it is unclear if a causal role exists. We report a case of minor neurocognitive disorder in a woman in her 40s with several years of high-dose daily dimenhydrinate abuse who subsequently developed significant delusional beliefs. Her clinical presentation was confounded by numerous other factors that could have impacted her cognition, such as a longstanding presumed learning disability, ankylosing spondylitis with adalimumab treatment, extensive cannabis use or potential development of a primary psychotic disorder. Her workup was within normal limits, and she has not responded to first-line antipsychotic medications to date. This case report adds to the growing evidence supporting concerns about potentially irreversible cognitive deficits in chronic misuse of anticholinergic agents, an association previously observed only in the elderly population.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10921430PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/bcr-2023-258493DOI Listing

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