Change Your Brain Every Day - Brain in the News: Avoid These Two Medications at All Costs
Episode Date: October 30, 2019In this episode of The Brain Warrior’s Way Podcast, Dr. Daniel Amen and Tana Amen weigh in on brain-related current events. This week’s “Brain in the News” items feature a link between the sup...plement ashwagandha and improved sleep and stress, two types of medication that are linked to dementia, a 9 year-old arsonist charged with first degree murder, a startling childhood obesity prediction, and a correlation of ADD/ADHD in teen moms.
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Welcome to the Brain Warriors Way podcast. I'm Dr. Daniel Amen.
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Welcome back.
In this podcast, we're going to do our weekly feature of Brain in the News.
There's so many articles in the news every week that related to the brain.
But before we do, let's read a review.
Do you want to read that one?
Sure.
My husband has done 58 dives in a hard side HBOT chamber,
which is hyperbaric oxygen therapy.
It has changed his life and his brain.
Toxic burn pit exposure from Afghanistan and Iraq.
Ouch.
We are fighting to
fight to get this widely recognized by the va awesome from kiwi kelly so i'm actually doing
hbot therapy right now as well and so is your dad and so is a lot of our patients you want a better
brain um if your brain is sleepy hyperbaric oxygen if be really healthy. Right. And my dad's actually doing it because
he had a challenge that just came from being older. I mean, the older we get, the less blood
flow there is to the brain. All right. We have all sorts of studies. We'll probably only get to
about four of them, but there's this new study on ashwagandha that it lowers stress and improves
sleep. And interesting, we actually have ashwagandha in our focus and energy product.
And focus and energy, people think, oh, it's like a caffeine drink. It's like, no, it's got no
caffeine, no sugar. It's got ashwagandha, rhodiola, ginseng, green tea, and choline.
And the reason that ashwagandha is there is it lowers stress but helps you focus at the same
time. So this study was actually done in India. A total of 60 participants were randomly divided into two groups, the ashwagandha group and the placebo
group. And what they found in the ashwagandha group, significant improvement in sleep and anxiety and stress scores. Wow. And it was the same dose that we actually have in focus and energy.
That's so interesting.
So focus and energy gives you focus and energy, but it helps you sleep.
Helps you sleep and decreases your anxiety and stress.
That's wild.
All right, well, this one freaked me out.
This study talks about two types of drugs you may want to avoid for the sake of your brain, benzodiazepines and anticholinergics.
Well, benzos were obvious for a long time.
And we talked about it.
So benzos are medications like Xanax or the generic is Alprazolam, Ativan, Valium. And I stopped prescribing them because there was research that came out that showed there
was a higher incidence of dementia, just what this study is showing.
And I didn't like how they looked on scans.
Right.
But the one that really freaked me out was the anticholinergics, because we'll talk about
why in a second.
But this is from the University of Washington.
They studied 3,500 people.
And they took people 65 and over, and over a 10-year period looked at all the drugs they had taken. During
that time, during the study, 800 of them developed dementia. What they found was benzodiazepines and
anticholinergics were involved and they could increase your risk of dementia by 54%. So
anticholinergics, let's talk about what those are. Because they've been touted as sort of the safe sleeping pill, right? So Benadryl,
Advil PM, right? They've got anticholinergics in them to help you get sleepy. We used to give it
in the hospital when we didn't want to give sleeping pills. And so whenever I'd be under,
like if we traveled to a different time zone and I had to be up early to be on TV with you or something, I would take Advil PM because I thought, oh, well, that's safe.
I don't, I rarely take it, but I would take it now and then.
And then what happened is after surgery, I started not sleeping as well after I had anesthesia and wasn't doing as well.
And when you travel, when you would come home, you tend to snore the night after you get back.
I have no idea why, but when he travels, he's on planes, he snores when you get back. And so when he would snore, I would get up and take Benadryl.
So you're saying I was ruining your brain? Yes.
It's my fault? Yeah. Well, now that I know, I'm not going to let you ruin my brain. So we'll
figure out another solution. But my point being the anticholinergics that I thought were fairly
safe for sleep are not safe for sleep. So now I'm going back to my very natural ways,
which I've got a whole criteria of ways that I sleep.
So I've got a whole list of things I do with my thyroid condition.
But that is not a safe way to sleep,
and it increases your risk of dementia by 54%.
Are you kidding me?
Now, that's for regular use.
But when I saw my scan and saw that it was sleepier than usual,
between the anesthesia, I'm pretty sure the anticholinergics didn't help. So yeah. Wow. Scary. Well, this is
an article that'll just make you cry. Nine-year-old arsonist charged with first degree murder and
mobile home fire that killed five relatives, including three toddlers. His mother insists he's not a monster and just made a mistake.
So the mother of a nine-year-old boy from Illinois
who has been charged with murder in connection to a deadly arson fire
that killed most of his immediate family has spoken out for the first time
saying that the child suffers from mental illness and is not
a monster. Katrina Alwood appeared on CBS this morning, two days after her sole surviving child,
Kyle, was charged with five counts of first-degree murder. He'd been identified as having mental health challenges. Did you know
that it is 11 years between the time a child first has their symptoms, it's 11 years between
that time and the time they're actually diagnosed and get help but he was
mother said everyone um is looking at him as if he's some kind of monster and people make
this mistake all the time it's a horrible tragedy no question um but but he was diagnosed. Was he being treated?
I don't know.
The article doesn't say that, but to bring criminal charges is just a bit insane.
Now you have to understand it.
You have to protect other people around him yeah this is a tricky one understand
and protect him and you know my passion story is about my nine-year-old nephew who attacked a
little girl on the baseball field for no reason and he had a cyst the size of a golf ball occupying the space of his left temporal lobe.
Or Jared, a story that we talk about a lot, who had rages as a young person and had been put on multiple medications that only made the rages worse, had a pattern in his brain called the ring of fire that
when you look at people who do bad things, not always, but often they have a troubled brain
that if known could be fixed. Yeah. So I would want to know more about the
diagnosed mental illness on this one. We talked about we talked about the can of worms about how drugs can change your personality in our previous podcast this week and this is the
slippery slope well actually um the mom said on tv that the boy had recently been diagnosed
with schizophrenia bipolar disorder and adhd so he was probably hearing voices, delusional, terrible mood swings.
And of course, I'm sure no one looked at his brain to know, because anytime you get those
diagnoses in combination at nine years old, something's severely wrong with that child's brain.
And, you know, the current day prescriptions are this medicine, that medicine, without really trying to understand.
Yeah, scary.
Okay, so more than 250 million children and teenagers will be obese by 2030.
That's really scary.
Even in China, which they've never really had an obesity issue in the past, is expected to have 61.9 million obese 5 to 19-year-olds.
This is just crazy.
This is 34.5 million more than India, which is second place at 27.4.
The U.S. is third with 16.9 million youth.
The U.K. comes in 36th with 1.3.
And this is expected to completely overwhelm, this pandemic will overwhelm health services,
with many countries being unable to cope with the demand of diabetes drugs and weight loss surgery.
The increase shows a critical failure of government to respect and protect.
I want to read that again. This increase shows a critical failure of government to respect and
protect our children's rights to good health. But I want to go further than that. They won't even do
the basic things like labeling food properly. That's what irritates me. Don't label things as
health food that aren't health food and label them correctly about what the risks are. At least,
at the very least, educate people. Don't just allow them to sell vape pens and foods and things
like that that you know are terrible for you. It's a war. It's a war. I mean, that's sort of
why we do the Brain Warriors Way podcast when that number of children will be obese.
It makes me wonder if the agenda is to keep people sick, fat, and depressed so you just have more control.
It's bizarre.
I know it's a conspiracy theory, but it's my theory.
I think it's ignorance.
Well, I do too, but.
Okay. From JAMA, there's an association of attention deficit hyperactivity disorder with teenage birth among girls and women in Sweden.
So teenage.
Yeah, that makes sense.
So people go, why is ADD or ADHD increasing in the population?
If you take 100 years, an ADD family will have five generations and more children per generation.
They're more impressive.
Where a non-ADD family will only have four generations.
So they're getting pregnant early. family will only have four generations. So on average, women have their first baby at the age
of 26. But on average, if a girl has ADD or ADHD, she has her first baby at the age of 20
because of the impulsivity that often goes along with it. And so that all by itself, so an ADD girl is likely to get pregnant earlier
and have more babies, where a non-ADD girl or woman is going to have her babies later and fewer of them and when they were treated with medication um they had decreased pregnancy
that makes sense so because the medication actually helped them be less impulsive um
i just thought that was well if you look at the difference between like i've got
two friends um one clearly has add from hell and one does not.
You know, the one planned out her family and went, how many kids can I afford?
When can I afford to start?
You know, the other one was like, what difference does that make?
Like, you'll figure it out and just started popping out babies.
It's very different how they think.
So, yeah.
Wow.
All right.
What one thing did you learn during Brain in the News? And so, yeah. Wow. All right.
What one thing did you learn during Brain in the News?
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