News April 2007
Drug Helps Posttraumatic Stress Disorder Nightmares
A generic drug already
used by millions of People for high blood pressure and prostate
problems has been found to improve sleep and lessen trauma nightmares
in veterans with posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD).
"This is the first drug that has been demonstrated effective
for PTSD nightmares and sleep disruption," said Murray A. Raskind,
MD, executive director of the mental health service at the Veterans
Affairs Puget Sound Health Care System and lead author of a study
appearing April 15 in Biological Psychiatry.
The randomized trial of 40 veterans compared a nightly dose of
prazosin (PRAISE-oh-sin) with placebo over eight weeks. Participants
continued to take other prescribed medications over the course of
the trial.
At the end of the study, veterans randomized to prazosin reported
significantly improved sleep quality, reduced trauma nightmares,
a better overall sense of well being, and an improved ability to
function.
"These nighttime symptoms are heavily troublesome to veterans,"
said Raskind, who also is director of VA’s VISN 20 (Veterans
Integrated Service Network #20) Mental Illness Research, Education
and Clinical Centers program (MIRECC). "If you get the nighttime
symptoms under control, veterans feel better all around."
Raskind, also a professor of psychiatry and behavioral sciences
at the University of Washington, estimates that of the 10 million
veterans and civilians with PTSD, about half have trauma-related
nightmares that could be helped with the drug.
Participants were given 1 mg of prazosin per day for the first
three days. The dose was gradually increased over the first four
weeks to a maximum of 15 mg at bedtime. The average dose of prazosin
in the trial was 13.3 mg. By comparison, typical prazosin doses
for controlling blood pressure or treating prostate problems range
from 3 mg to 30 mg per day in divided doses.
The drug did not affect blood pressure compared to placebo, though
some participants reported transient dizziness when standing from
a sitting position during the first weeks of prazosin titration.
Other occasional side effects included nasal congestion, headache,
and dry mouth, but these were all minor, according to the authors.
"This drug has been taken by many people for decades,"
said Raskind. "If there were serious long-term adverse side
effects, it is likely we would know about them by now."
The relatively small size of the study was due to the easy availability
of this generic drug, Raskind said. "If you are doing a study
with a new drug, the only way people can get it is to be in the
study. With prazosin, we have approximately 5,000 veterans with
a PTSD diagnosis taking it already in the Northwest alone. So we
had to find veterans with PTSD who were not [taking it]."
For treating PTSD, prazosin costs 10 to 30 cents a day at VA contract
prices. It is not a sedating sleeping pill, emphasized Raskind.
"It does not induce sleep. But once you are asleep, you sleep
longer and better."
And better sleep can make a big difference. "This drug changes
lives," Raskind said. "Nothing else works like prazosin."
Trauma nightmares appear to arise during light sleep or disruption
in REM sleep, whereas normal dreams—both pleasant and unpleasant—
occur during normal REM sleep. Prazosin works by blocking the brain’s
response to the adrenaline-like neurotransmitter norepinephrine.
Blocking norepinephrine normalizes and increases REM sleep. In this
study, veterans taking prazosin reported that they resumed normal
dreaming.
One dose of prazosin works for 6 to 8 hours. Unlike similar drugs,
prazosin does not induce tolerance; people can take it for years
without increasing the dose. But when veterans stop taking it, Raskind
said, the trauma nightmares usually return.
Source: http://www.huliq.com/
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