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JOURNAL ARTICLE
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[Do benign prostatic hyperplasia drugs affect mood or cognition?]

Der Urologe. Ausg. A 2019 Februrary 15
Based on new evidence, we discuss the risk of central nervous side effects, mainly reduced cognition/dementia and depressive symptoms during the use of drugs for the treatment of lower urinary symptoms suggestive of benign prostatic hyperplasia. Cognitive impairments during use of muscarinic antagonists are well documented and mechanistically well understood, but their occurrence differs quantitatively between members of this drug class. The occurrence of depressive symptoms while using 5α-reductase inhibitors only became known recently but has now been observed consistently in several studies and is mechanistically plausible; it appears to occur with similar incidence when using dutasteride and finasteride. A moderate increase in new diagnoses of dementia has recently been reported from a single study upon use of tamsulosin but not other α1 -adrenoceptor antagonists. The plausibility of a mechanistic cause-effect relationship is only moderate, and the association could be explained based on selection bias. Overall, physicians should be alert for the occurrence of central nervous side effects during the treatment of lower urinary tract symptoms.

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