Link Established Between Top Anti-Anxiety Drug And Dementia

Natural Society | December 6 2012

Benzodiazepines are some of the most widely prescribed pharmaceuticals in the world. In the U.S. alone, there are fifteen kinds of benzos, commonly prescribed for anxiety and sleeplessness. They have a calming and tranquilizing effect. But French scientists recently found they will do much more than calm you down—they could increase your risk of dementia.

The study was likely spurred because 30 percent of people over the age of 65 in France take benzodiazepines. How many Americans are on the drugs isn’t well known, though it’s thought to be a similar percentage. In older adults, the medication is most often doled out to help with insomnia. But, it’s in these elderly patients that the risk for related dementia is most prominent.

According to the research, those on the benzos increased their risk of dementia significantly. Those who didn’t take the drugs had a risk of 3.2 per 100 “person years” (describing one person at risk of development of dementia during a period of one year). In those who did take the drugs, the rate was 4.8 per 100 person years. In other words, according to the study authors, the rate of dementia was increased by 50% in those who took benzodiazepines.

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Worried About Fluoride Exposure? Protect Yourself With Selenium

Susan Patterson – Having too much fluoride in the body can lead to a number of serious health conditions including reduced IQ, hastened development of cancer, and enhanced oxidative stress. Recent research indicates that the trace mineral selenium may be effective in minimizing the toxic effects of fluoride and even ushering it out of the body while improving the body’s defenses against free radicals.

Fluoride and Oxidative Stress

Both groundwater contamination and air pollution have are responsible for over 200 million people across 25 different countries having life threatening levels of chronic fluorosis. One recently released study demonstrated that people residing in areas where there was high fluoride had marked suppression of three critical endogenous antioxidants: catalase, superoxide dismutase and glutathione peroxidase in comparison to residents residing in areas with lower fluoride counts.

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