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Can Medicine Make You Fat?
In a word, yes. Here’s what to do when the drugs
you need also put on the pounds.
By Jennifer Acosta Scott WebMD Feature
from "Health"
When you start putting on weight,
you look to the usual suspects: the dusty treadmill
or that stash of chocolate in your desk drawer.
But for 30-year-old Chelley Thelen,
the culprit sat in her medicine cabinet. In six
years, Thelen gained 60 pounds from taking
prednisone, a steroid used to treat her arthritis.
Thelen is just one of a growing
number of women who can blame their excess pounds on
the drugs they’re taking for everything from
allergies to migraines. The chances of finding
yourself on a drug that can lead to weight gain have
more than doubled in the last 20 years.
In fact, the number has increased
from one in ten to one in four, says George
Blackburn, MD, associate director of the Harvard
Medical School Division of Nutrition. The problem is
so critical that Blackburn teaches a course for
physicians on the weight-gain side effects of
medications.
“The drugs we’re most concerned
about are drugs for chronic diseases, like diabetes
and psychiatric problems, because you have to be
medicated for life,” Blackburn says. But even
innocuous-sounding meds like over-the-counter sleep
aids can cause snug-jeans syndrome—some by slowing
your metabolism, others by altering the hormones in
your body that control your appetite.
And the problem isn’t just affecting
women’s waistlines: Some are even choosing not to
take drugs critical to their health for
weight-control reasons. If you suspect that meds are
making you gain weight, check our list below for the
most common culprits and expert advice on what to do
about it.
Drugs that can pile on pounds
Antihistamines
The fat effect: Allergy drugs
containing diphenhydramine (such as Benadryl) have a
sedating effect that saps your energy if you take
them regularly. You’re not as active, so you’re
burning fewer calories, Blackburn says.
What to do: Ask about another
antihistamine like Claritin or Zyrtec that doesn’t
include sedating ingredients
Antidepressants
The fat effect: Some antidepressants
affect neurotransmitters in your brain that control
appetite and mood, both of which can make you eat
more.
What to do: See a psychiatrist
instead of a family physician or internist and ask
about antidepressants that don’t typically cause
weight gain, such as Wellbutrin or Zyban.
Birth control pills
The fat effect: Birth control pills
may add up to five pounds because the estrogen in
them can cause you to retain water.
What to do: Ask about a low-estrogen
pill like Yasmin, or the progestin-only minipill. Or
consider trying the NuvaRing, which releases lower
doses of hormones than the birth control pill, or
try an intrauterine device.
Sleep aids
The fat effect: You’ll find the same
culprit, diphen-hydramine, in over-the-counter sleep
aids, such as Tylenol Simply Sleep, Sominex, or
Nytol, or “nighttime” versions of cold and pain
medicines, like Sudafed PE Nighttime Cold or
Excedrin PM.
What to do: Your doctor may
prescribe an option like Ambien that’s designed to
cut carryover sedating effects.
Migraine meds
The fat effect: Depakote and
Depakene, medicines which are sometimes used to
prevent recurring migraines, can make you want to
eat more, says Harminder Sikand, clinical director
of pharm-acy at Scripps Mercy Hospital in San Diego.
What to do: Ask your doctor about
Imitrex or other migraine drugs that are less likely
to increase your appetite.
Steroids
The fat effect: Prednisone, often
used to treat rheumatoid arthritis and chronic
inflammation, can make you feel ravenously hungry.
What to do: Your doctor may be able
to give you prescription-strength NSAIDs (nonsteroidal
anti-inflammatory drugs, such as ibuprofen) to help.
If you need to stay on steroids, work with a trainer
to increase the calories you’re burning.
© WebMD Inc. All rights reserved.
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“The
drugs we’re most concerned about are drugs for
chronic diseases, like diabetes and psychiatric
problems, because you have to be medicated for
life,” |
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