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The article is short and high-level, but offers good basic information. It is here:
http://www.mayoclinic.org/diseases-conditions/alzheimers-disease/in-depth/alzheimers/art-20048103
When my husband was prescribed Aricept (another one of the 5) I recall ready a study done in the UK comparing large numbers who took the drug to those who did not, over a long period (with all the scientific controls in place) and they found no difference in the length of disease time before care centers were needed.
But we tried the drug anyway. Low and behold, it was awesome for my husband, and he did not even have the kind of dementia it was developed and approved for. Several other non-dementia drugs proved highly successful for him as well. My motto became "better living through chemistry."
I urge you to try this dementia-approved drug with your loved one. Maybe your mom will be one of the lucky ones and you really will see a difference. It would certainly be worth the time, effort, and cost, if that turns out to be the case. Obviously it won't cure. It won't even stop the inevitable trajectory. But if it relieves a few of the symptoms for a few years, that is the best we can hope for in the present state of the art. If you try it for six months without any noticeable improvement, then I think I'd discuss with the doctor discontinuing it.
(By the way the presentations on new approaches to research to come up with specific "broken" items that drug companies can concentrate on "fixing" was very impressive. Not happening tomorrow, though.)
My mom did not experience any negative side effects. I would say try it.
I disagree with Ferris, and whoever found her answer helpful is also ignorant. Having worked in the pharmaceutical industry, I know how hard it is to get a drug released to the public. If it was as useless as she claims, it would not have been passed. I also disagree with the "who cares" mentality that advocates not taking proper care of people with Alzheimer's or dementia because they will eventually die. The Alzheimer's death could take 20 years. To neglect a patient's other medical needs during that time is abuse. Not treating conditions that are treatable (like Alzheimer's) is also abuse. To say Namenda doesn't slow the progression of the illness when the manufacturer had to prove just that to get the drug passed is ignorant.
Remember, life is also a terminal condition. Should we neglect our own care because we're going to die anyway? No, that would be stupid.
I really wish that people on this forum would answer the questions that are asked. The OP asked if anyone had *experience with the drug. So all the answers should discuss our experience with the drug, NOT unfounded opinions.
days for several years.....
Some of you mentioned sleep medicine. We had a hard time finding something that the doctor would prescribe which would work. Finally have had pretty good success with Mirtazapine. 1/4 of a pill about 1½ hrs before she goes to bed and most nights she sleeps well.