Commonly prescribed pain drug can increase your risk of dementia by up to 40%
How nerve-racking!
The anti-seizure drug gabapentin is used to treat epilepsy, nerve pain after shingles and restless legs syndrome by affecting chemical messengers in the brain and nerves.
Common side effects include dizziness, drowsiness, headaches and nausea. Now, risk of dementia and mild cognitive impairment in people taking it for chronic low back pain.
“Our findings indicate an association between gabapentin prescription and dementia or cognitive impairment within 10 years. Moreover, increased gabapentin prescription frequency correlated with dementia incidence,” the study authors wrote this week in the journal Regional Anesthesia & Pain Medicine.
Researchers pored over records of 26,400 patients who had been prescribed gabapentin for persistent low back pain between 2004 and 2024 and 26,400 patients who didn’t get a prescription.
