Journal
ANNALS OF INTERNAL MEDICINE
Volume 132, Issue 5, Pages 354-+Publisher
AMER COLL PHYSICIANS
DOI: 10.7326/0003-4819-132-5-200003070-00004
Keywords
rhinitis, allergic; fexofenadine; diphenhydramine; antihistamines; automobile driving
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Funding
- NCRR NIH HHS [M01-RR-59] Funding Source: Medline
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Background: Sedating antihistamines may impair driving performance as seriously as alcohol. Objective: To compare the effects of fexofenadine, diphenhydramine, alcohol, and placebo on driving performance. Design: Randomized, double-blind, double-dummy, four-treatment, four-period crossover trial. Setting: The lowa Driving Simulator. Participants: 40 licensed drivers with seasonal allergic rhinitis who were 25 to 44 years of age. Intervention: One dose of fexofenadine (60 mg), diphenhydramine (50 mg), alcohol (approximately 0.1 % blood alcohol concentration), or placebo, given at weekly intervals before participants drove for 1 hour in the lowa Driving Simulator. Measurements: The primary end point was coherence, a continuous measure of participants' ability to match the varying speed of a vehicle that they were following. Secondary end points were drowsiness and other driving measures, including lane keeping and response to a vehicle that unexpectedly blocked the lane ahead. Results: Participants had significantly better coherence after taking alcohol or fexofenadine than after taking diphenhydramine. Lane keeping (steering instability and crossing the center line) was impaired after alcohol and diphenhydramine use compared with fexofenadine use. Mean response time to the blocking vehicle was slowest after alcohol use (2.21 seconds) compared with fexofenadine use (1.95 seconds). Self-reported drowsiness did not predict lack of coherence and was weakly associated with minimum following distance, steering instability, and left-lane excursion. Conclusions: Participants had similar performance when treated with fexofenadine or placebo. After alcohol use, participants performed the primary task well but not the secondary tasks; as a result, overall driving performance was poorer. After participants took diphenhydramine, driving performance was poorest, indicating that diphenhydramine had a greater impact on driving than alcohol did. Drowsiness ratings were not a good predictor of impairment, suggesting that drivers cannot use drowsiness to indicate when they should not drive.
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