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Tardive neurotoxicity of anticholinergic drugs: A review

Journal

JOURNAL OF NEUROCHEMISTRY
Volume 158, Issue 6, Pages 1334-1344

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/jnc.15244

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Michael J. Fox Foundation
  2. Canada Research Chairs
  3. Craig H. Nielsen Foundation

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The cholinergic system is a complex neurotransmitter system involved at multiple levels of the nervous system. Anticholinergic medications, commonly prescribed, have been linked to dementia and may impact cerebral vasculature and neuroinflammation, potentially contributing to progression of neurodegenerative diseases. Long-term use of these medications has detrimental effects beyond short-term cognitive impairment, affecting cholinergic neurotransmission and receptors on immune cells and vasculature.
The cholinergic system is a complex neurotransmitter system with functional involvement at multiple levels of the nervous system including the cerebral cortex, spinal cord, autonomic nervous system, and neuromuscular junction. Anticholinergic medications are among the most prescribed medications, making up one-third to one-half of all medications prescribed for seniors. Recent evidence has linked long-term use of anticholinergic medications and dementia. Emerging evidence implicates the cholinergic system in the regulation of cerebral vasculature as well as neuroinflammation, suggesting that anticholinergic medications may contribute to absolute risk and progression of neurodegenerative diseases. In this review, we explore the involvement of the cholinergic system in various neurodegenerative diseases and the possible detrimental effects of anticholinergic medications on the onset and progression of these disorders. We identified references by searching the PubMed and Cochrane database between January 1990 and September 2019 for English-language animal and human studies including randomized clinical trials (RCTs), meta-analyses, systematic reviews, and observational studies. In addition, we conducted a manual search of reference lists from retrieved studies. Long-term anticholinergic medication exposure may have detrimental consequences beyond well-documented short-term cognitive effects, through a variety of mechanisms either directly impacting cholinergic neurotransmission or through receptors expressed on the vasculature or immune cells, providing a pathophysiological framework for complex interactions across the entire neuroaxis.

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