Thursday, June 11, 2009

Paxil, cognition and people with cancer

People with cancer often have problems with their memory and attention. The 'circuits' in the brain responsible for the cognitive problems in cancer patients are also linked to depression and researchers from the University of Rochester in New York looked into the effectiveness of the antidepressant Paxil in helping with these cognitive problems. They studied 800 people with cancer aged between 22 and 87. The study showed that even taking into account its effects on depression Paxil still had a 'significant effect' on cognitive functioning.

You can find out more about this research at

http://uk.reuters.com/article/healthNews/idUKTRE5536L220090604?feedType=RSS&feedName=healthNews

3 comments:

xave said...

Of all the diseases that may afflict us, none is more feared than More..

xave said...

Of all the diseases that may afflict us, none is more feared than More..

xave said...

Of all the diseases that may afflict us, none is more feared than cancer. In the past two decades medical science has made enormous progress in unravelling the mysteries of cancer and in trating it. And yet, even though a patient’s chances of surviving are greater today that they have ever been, the death toll from cancer continues to rise. It is much higher than it was forty years ago.More..