Islamabad, Jan 16 : Adults who take one of the
world's most commonly prescribed sleep medications are significantly more at
risk for nighttime falls and potential injury, according to a new study by the
University of Colorado at Boulder.
The study, which involved 25 healthy
adults, showed 58 percent of the older adults and 27 percent of the young adults
who took a hypnotic, sleep-inducing drug called zolpidem showed a significant
loss of balance when awakened two hours after sleep.
The findings are
important because falls are the leading cause of injury in older adults, and 30
percent of adults 65 and older who fall require hospitalization each year, said
CU-Boulder Associate Professor Kenneth Wright, lead study author.
To
measure balance, the research team used a technique known as a "tandem walk" in
which subjects place one foot in front of the other with a normal step length on
a 16-foot-long, six-inch-wide beam on the floor. In 10 previous practice trials
with no medication, none of the 25 participants stepped off the beam, indicating
no loss of balance. All participants were provided with stabilizing assistance
to prevent falls during the trials, he said.
"The balance impairments of
older adults taking zolpidem were clinically significant and the cognitive
impairments were more than twice as large compared to the same older adults
taking placebos," said Wright, a faculty member in the integrative physiology
department. "This suggests to us that sleep medication produces significant
safety risks."
The new CU-Boulder study is the first to measure both the
walking stability and cognition of subjects taking hypnotic sleep medicines or
placebos. In addition to the balance problems caused by zolpidem, the study also
showed that waking up after two hours of sleep after taking zolpidem enhances
sleep inertia, or grogginess, a state that temporarily impairs working memory.
The study participants were given computerized performance tests that involved
adding randomly generated numbers.
A paper on the subject was published
in the Journal of the American Geriatric Society. Co-authors included
CU-Boulder's Daniel Frey, Justus Ortega, Courtney Wiseman and Claire Farley. The
study was funded primarily by the National Institutes of Health.
The
effects of sleep inertia even without sleep medication has previously been shown
to cause cognitive impairment, said Wright. But when the CU-Boulder study
subjects took zolpidem rather than a placebo, the cognitive impairments
essentially doubled.
One unexpected study finding was that young people
taking placebos appear to be more cognitively impacted by sleep inertia than
older adults taking placebos, he said.
A 2006 study led by Wright showed
that study subjects who took no sleep medicine and were awakened after eight
hours of sleep were more cognitively impaired, for a short period of time, than
a totally sleep deprived person.
Several billion doses of zolpidem have
been prescribed worldwide, said Wright, who also directs CU-Boulder's Sleep and
Chronobiology Laboratory. Zolpidem is a generic drug that is marketed under a
number of different brand names, including Ambien, Zolpimist, Edluar, Hypogen,
Somidem and Ivedal.
The CU-Boulder team also measured balance and
cognition in older adults who took no sleep medication and were kept awake for
two hours past their normal bedtime. They found that 25 percent of these older
adults failed the tandem walking balance test, which is consistent with what is
seen in people who have insomnia. "Just having insomnia itself increases your
risk of falls, even without sleep medication," he said.
The finding that
zolpidem affected older adults more than younger adults in balance tests may be
explained in part by the fact that both groups were given five milligram doses
on study nights. While the normal dose for older adults is five milligrams, the
standard dosage for younger adults being treated for insomnia is 10 milligrams.
"This is an area that needs more study," he said.
The study results
showing that both hypnotic sleep medications and sleep inertia cause significant
impairment have important public health implications, said Wright. In older
adults, falls have caused millions of nonfatal injuries annually and more than
300,000 fatalities worldwide. "Falls can be very debilitating, especially when
older people break their hips and require hospitalization, causing their quality
of life to go down," said Wright.
In addition, the cognitive impairments
caused by both zolpidem and sleep inertia may impact decision-making, including
responding to situations like fire alarms and medical emergencies as well as
caring for sick children or driving to a clinic or hospital, said
Wright.
"One of the goals of this study was to understand the risk of
this sleep medication and of sleep inertia on human safety and cognition and to
educate adults and health care workers about potential problems," said Wright.
"We are not suggesting that sleep medications should not be used, because they
have their place in terms of the treatment of insomnia."
One possible
solution to reducing falls of older people due to zolpidem, other sleep
medications or sleep inertia would be to install bedside commodes for those who
frequently wake up in the night to void themselves, said Wright. Additional
research is needed on this important public health and safety topic, he
said.
Ends
SA/EN
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» Popular sleep medicine puts older adults at risk for falls, cognitive impairment
Popular sleep medicine puts older adults at risk for falls, cognitive impairment
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