- Title
- Selegiline in treatment of behavioral and cognitive symptoms of Alzheimer disease.
- Author
- Tolbert SR; Fuller MA
- Address
- Department of Veterans Affairs Medical Center, Cleveland, Ohio 44106, USA.
- Source
- Ann Pharmacother, 30(10):1122-9 1996 Oct
- Abstract
- OBJECTIVE: To evaluate the effects of selegiline on behavioral and cognitive
symptoms of patients with Alzheimer disease. DATA SOURCES: An English-language MEDLINE
search (1982-1995) was used to identify the review articles and human clinical trials
discussed in this article. STUDY SELECTION: Double- and single-blind and open-label trials
were reviewed. Studies were also reviewed if selegiline was evaluated comparatively
with other agents. Review articles were used for background information. DATA EXTRACTION:
Data were evaluated from human studies. Studies were critiqued on the basis of design,
methodology, duration, sample size, and the degree to which neuropsychological tests used
in each study were compared. DATA SYNTHESIS: Selegiline is a selective,
irreversible inhibitor of monoamine oxidase type B. Eight of 11 controlled trials showed selegiline
had a positive effect on cognition (e.g., word fluency, delayed recall, total recall). Two
of 5 controlled trials evaluating selegiline's effect on behavior (e.g., anxiety,
tension, excitement, depression) showed a positive effect. CONCLUSIONS: The role of selegiline
remains to be determined by large well-controlled long-term clinical trials. Selegiline
may be a useful agent in managing behavioral and cognitive symptomatology associated with
Alzheimer disease. Given that the management of Alzheimer disease is symptomatic and no
standard treatment exists, selegiline should be considered among the various
options.