Guidelines for Treatment
The challenge in formulating guidelines for the treatment of behavioral issues is that dementia patients are highly variable. Two people may look the same, have the same level of dementia, and have similar symptoms. Yet these two patients may respond very differently to the same medication.
Thus, treating these symptoms requires trial-and-error medicine. I am upfront about this with the families of my patients. As I always state at the beginning, there is no way to be absolutely sure we can find the right combination of activities, behavioral intervention, pain management and medications that will lead to calm engagement without side effects.

While working several years as a fellow in geriatrics at Mt. Sinai Hospital in Manhattan, as an assistant professor of medicine at University of California-San Francisco, at the Veterans’ Administration Hospital in San Francisco and as a hospice director in the North Bay, I have collaborated for years with geriatric psychiatrists, geriatricians and neurologists.
I have handled a wide variety of cases in which we have enjoyed excellent results treating behavior problems. (There are a handful of patients that medications could not help calm without severe side effects, but they are rare.) It’s a matter of balancing treatment for agitation with loss of abilities like walking.

Treating Behavior is an Art
That said, the Food and Drug Administration has not approved the drugs described below to treat dementia. These medications have serious side effects. Neuroleptics may increase the absolute risk of stroke by approximately 3 percent. They may increase the absolute risk of sudden death by approximately 1 percent. Medical practitioners, families and caregivers should closely monitor patients who are using these medications. even if the patient is calm. It can be very easy to miss further decline or over-sedation.
First, Do No Harm
My first rule of coping with the behavioral symptoms of dementia is this: Don’t prescribe any medication that will likely make the patient less inhibited.
Many anti-anxiety drugs like Lorazepam/Ativan® or Alprazolam/Xanax®, sleeping pills like Temazepam/Restoril, or Zolpidem/Ambien®—act very much like a couple shots of vodka, or whiskey. They make patients less inhibited, which often worsens the problems of dementia.


Alternatives for Behavioral Problems
Several other classes of drugs and treatment may be used more effectively to treat behavioral symptoms. These include anti-psychotics (“neuroleptics”), antidepressants, and anti-seizure medications. Electro-convulsive therapy, known popularly as “shock treatment,” has evolved considerably since it earned its bad name. It now can be much more humanely administered, and it really can help some patients.