The Law Offices of Sean W. Scott
VirtualLawOffice LOGO
SiteMap


Virtual Online Support Group.
An Alzheimer's Association approved support group.
Alzheimer's Association

(click to go to the Alzheimer's Association's web site.)

Go
New
Find
Notify
Tools
Reply
  
-star Rating Rate It!  Login/Join 
Twenty Plus Circle
Picture of Sean W. Scott, Esq.
Posted
I want to share with everyone the latest news story on Memantine.
Friday, October 17, 2003

FDA approves long-awaited new Alzheimer's drug


By Lauran Neergaard / Associated Press


WASHINGTON -- The government on Friday approved a new option for sufferers of Alzheimer's disease, the first treatment specifically for late stages of the mind-robbing illness.

Called memantine, the drug has long been sold in Germany and many U.S. families out of options try to buy supplies overseas via the Internet.

Now armed with Food and Drug Administration approval, U.S. marketer Forest Laboratories will sell memantine here under the brand name Namenda, for patients with moderate to severe Alzheimer's symptoms.

Forest said the drug should be on pharmacy shelves in January.

Memantine doesn't offer miraculous benefits. The FDA's scientific advisers, in evaluating the drug last month, worried that memantine's debut could give false hope to families of the most severely ill.

In studies, some patients given memantine have experienced improvements in memory and thinking skills. But for the vast majority the drug instead slows the pace of deterioration, letting patients maintain certain functions a little longer. For example, the drug helped some patients maintain the ability to go to the bathroom independently for six more months, a benefit caregivers called very important.

It's an important step because memantine is the first option for advanced stages of Alzheimer's. The nation's four other Alzheimer's medications -- Aricept, Exelon, Reminyl and Cognex -- work in early stages of the disease.

And those drugs work very differently than memantine. They delay the breakdown of a brain chemical called acetylcholine that is vital for nerve cells to communicate. Memantine, in contrast, blocks excess amounts of another brain chemical, called glutamate, that can damage or kill nerve cells.

That means for the first time, doctors could prescribe combinations of drugs in hopes of better results.

About 4 million Americans have Alzheimer's, and a million of them are believed to suffer severe symptoms
 
Posts: 53 | Location: St. Petersburg, FL | Registered: Mon September 22 2003Reply With QuoteReport This Post
Twenty Plus Circle
Posted Hide Post
Needymeds.com has patient assistance programs for all of the pharmaceutical companies that are currently available.

Partnership for Prescription Assistance PPARX.ORG brings pharmaceutical companies, doctors and community groups together to assist in getting free/reduced price medications to those in need.

The National Council on the Aging (202) 479-1200 has programs for people 55 and over that may pay for prescriptions, health care, utilities and other essential services or items: http://www.benefitscheckup or http://www.benefitscheckuprx
 
Posts: 21 | Location: Clearwater, Florida | Registered: Fri November 11 2005Reply With QuoteReport This Post
  Powered by Social Strata  
 


© Sean W. Scott, Esq. 2004