PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Your pain meds' side effects may be masquerading as heart failure

2025-12-02
(Press-News.org) Clinicians may fail to recognize common side effects of drugs like gabapentin — which are frequently prescribed for nerve pain — leading them to prescribe unnecessary medications that cause yet more side effects. This phenomenon, known as a “prescribing cascade,” is increasingly seen as a danger to older patients. 

In this case, gabapentinoids — which include gabapentin (Neurontin) and pregabalin (Lyrica) — may cause leg swelling, leading doctors to suspect heart failure and then prescribe diuretics that can cause kidney injury, light headedness, and falls. 

Researchers tracked the medical records of 120 older veterans, most of whom were male and were long-term users of five or more medications. All had taken gabapentinoids, followed by loop diuretics, which are prescribed for fluid buildup, a possible symptom of heart failure.  

“Gabapentinoids are non-opioids, and prescribers associate them with a relatively favorable safety profile,” Michael Steinman, MD, a professor of Medicine at UCSF and senior author of the study said, noting that these prescriptions have almost doubled in a decade. “Patients taking them should regularly check in with their doctor to assess whether this is the best treatment for them and consider other options, including non-drug alternatives that might be more appropriate.” 

Following gabapentinoids, the patients developed swelling in the legs or feet, but only 4 of the veterans’ physicians considered the drugs as the culprit, while 69 considered other causes. This included heart failure, and another condition called venous stasis in which abnormal blood flow puts pressure on veins, sometimes leading to ulcers. Although none of the veterans had these conditions in the year before they started taking gabapentinoids, just one doctor discontinued the drug. Close to 1 in 5 patients underwent imaging to rule out life-threatening conditions that the doctors suspected were the cause of their leg swelling.  

All of the physicians, including those who suspected gabapentinoids as the cause, prescribed loop diuretics, such as Lasix. Within two months, 28 patients had symptoms that may have been due to the new drugs, such as worsening kidney functioning, dizziness, and blurred vision, and low sodium or potassium, which can disrupt critical body functions. Six were hospitalized or evaluated in the Emergency Department. 

“Gabapentinoids may be prescribed at unnecessarily high doses or for conditions that they may not help,” said Matthew Growdon, MD, an assistant professor of Medicine at UCSF who is the first author of the paper. “In these cases, doctors should consider not prescribing these drugs — or giving lower doses to lessen the risk of prescribing cascades and other side effects.” 

Journal: JAMA Network Open 

Co-Authors: Please see the paper 

Funding: National Institute on Aging (R03AG078804, K76AG088411, R03AG082859, P30AG044281, P01AG066605, 2K24AG049057, P01AG066605, R33AG086944); National Center for Advancing Translational Sciences (KL2TR001870); VA Center for Medication Safety in Aging and VA National Center for Patient Safety. 

Disclosures: Steinman received honoraria from the American Geriatrics Society and royalties from UpToDate. 

END


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Carbon monoxide, the ‘silent killer,’ becomes a boon for fuel cell catalysts

2025-12-02
Researchers Dr. Gu-Gon Park, Dr. Yongmin Kwon, and Dr. Eunjik Lee from the Hydrogen Fuel Cell Laboratory at the Korea Institute of Energy Research (President Yi Chang-Keun, hereafter “KIER”) have developed a technology that uses carbon monoxide, typically harmful to humans, to precisely control metal thin films at a thickness of 0.3 nanometers. This technology enables faster and simpler production of core–shell catalysts, a key factor in improving the economic viability of fuel cells, and is expected to significantly boost related industries. Core–shell catalysts refer to catalysts in which the inner core and outer shell are made of different metals. ...

Historical geography helps researchers solve 2,700-year old eclipse mystery

2025-12-02
An international team of researchers has used knowledge of historical geography to reexamine the earliest datable total solar eclipse record known to the scientific community, enabling accurate measurements of Earth's variable rotation speed from 709 BCE. The researchers calculated how the Sun would have appeared from Qufu, the ancient Chinese capital of the Lu Duchy, during the total solar eclipse. Using this information, they analyzed the ancient description of what has been considered the solar corona—the ...

SwRI expands High-Viscosity Flow Loop to test equipment moving heavy oils

2025-12-02
SAN ANTONIO — December 2, 2025 — Southwest Research Institute (SwRI) has upgraded its High-Viscosity Flow Loop (HVFL) to meet increased demands in the oil and gas industry. The expanded and upgraded facility now enables SwRI to offer more comprehensive, efficient, and cost-effective heavy oil testing. Increasing production of heavy oil around the world led SwRI to develop the HVFL in 2015 to gain a better understanding of flow equipment performance in extremely viscous conditions. “Today, as operators tap into reservoirs with higher gas volume fractions, conventional pumping systems struggle to process the volatile mixture of gas and liquid, demanding ...

Insilico Medicine and Atossa Therapeutics publish AI-driven study in Nature's Scientific Reports identifying (Z)-endoxifen as a potential therapeutic candidate for glioblastoma

2025-12-02
Cambridge, MA — 12/02/2025 — Insilico Medicine (“Insilico”), a global leader in AI-powered drug discovery, and Atossa Therapeutics (“Atossa”) (Nasdaq: ATOS), a clinical-stage biopharmaceutical company developing novel treatments for breast cancer and other serious conditions, announce the publication of a joint study evaluating the potential of (Z)-endoxifen for glioblastoma multiforme (GBM). The peer-reviewed article, now published in Nature’s Scientific Reports, represents one of the most comprehensive AI-enabled analyses to date exploring whether endoxifen, an active metabolite of tamoxifen ...

An overlooked hormone eyed as deadly driver of postmenopausal breast cancer in women with obesity

2025-12-02
WASHINGTON – A new analysis of research into the most common type of breast cancer has zeroed in on an overlooked hormone that may be responsible for the increased risk of breast cancer death in post-menopausal women with obesity. It also raises the possibility that treatment of these aggressive breast cancers could be improved with addition of weight-loss drugs known as GLP-1 receptor agonists. The most common and deadly form of this disease in women after menopauses is estrogen receptor positive (ER+) breast cancer. According to Joyce Slingerland, ...

Study links childhood vaccination to lower risk of drug-resistant bacteria

2025-12-02
PULLMAN, Wash. – Children in Guatemala who received a common vaccine that helps prevent pneumonia were less likely to carry antibiotic-resistant bacteria, according to a new study led by Washington State University researchers. The team examined whether rotavirus (RV) and pneumococcal (PCV13) vaccines reduce gut colonization by a group of bacteria that includes Escherichia coli and resists critical antibiotics used to treat severe infections. Colonization occurs when the bacteria are present in the body, often in the gut, without causing illness, yet they can persist and later cause infections or spread to others. While rotavirus ...

LLMs choose friends and colleagues like people

2025-12-02
When large language models (LLMs) make decisions about networking and friendship, the models tend to act like people, across both synthetic simulations and real-world network contexts. Marios Papachristou and Yuan Yuan developed a framework to study network formation behaviors of multiple LLM agents and compared these behaviors against human behaviors. The authors conducted simulations using several large language models placed in a network, which were asked to choose which other nodes to connect with, given their number of connections, common neighbors, and shared attributes, ...

Gas stoves and nitrogen dioxide exposure

2025-12-02
Twenty-two million Americans would no longer be breathing in unhealthy levels of nitrogen dioxide if they switched from gas and propane stoves to electric stoves. Robert Jackson and colleagues combined outdoor air quality data with estimates of indoor nitrogen dioxide emissions from stoves in more than fifteen cities. As outdoor air quality improves, stoves become an increasingly important source of exposure. According to the World Health Organization, health risks to the respiratory system increase at levels above ...

Beauty linked with metabolic costs of perceiving images

2025-12-02
Humans may find images that take less energy to process aesthetically pleasing, suggesting that our attraction to beauty is at least partially an energy conservation strategy.  Looking at something can feel effortless, but in energetic terms, it isn’t cheap. The brain uses 20% of the body’s energy, and the visual system accounts for about 44% of that expenditure. Looking at very simple stimuli, like a blank white room, is energy-efficient but boring. Looking at very busy or unusual image can feel tiring and unpleasant. Yikai Tang and colleagues presented 4,914 ...

First Nations Australians twice as likely to be digitally excluded: report

2025-12-02
First Nations Australians are twice as likely as other Australians to be digitally excluded and face barriers to accessing, affording and using the internet. For those living in remote Australia, the barriers are much greater. Three in four First Nations people living in remote and very remote communities are digitally excluded according to the Mapping the Digital Gap report by RMIT University and Swinburne University of Technology. This means many face significant barriers to accessing and using online services needed for daily social, economic and cultural life. This 2025 outcomes report draws on three years of ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Kennesaw State's Vijay Anand honored as National Academy of Inventors Senior Member

Recovery from whaling reveals the role of age in Humpback reproduction 

Can the canny tick help prevent disease like MS and cancer?

Newcomer children show lower rates of emergency department use for non‑urgent conditions, study finds

Cognitive and neuropsychiatric function in former American football players

From trash to climate tech: rubber gloves find new life as carbon capturers materials

A step towards needed treatments for hantaviruses in new molecular map

Boys are more motivated, while girls are more compassionate?

Study identifies opposing roles for IL6 and IL6R in long-term mortality

AI accurately spots medical disorder from privacy-conscious hand images

Transient Pauli blocking for broadband ultrafast optical switching

Political polarization can spur CO2 emissions, stymie climate action

Researchers develop new strategy for improving inverted perovskite solar cells

Yes! The role of YAP and CTGF as potential therapeutic targets for preventing severe liver disease

Pancreatic cancer may begin hiding from the immune system earlier than we thought

Robotic wing inspired by nature delivers leap in underwater stability

A clinical reveals that aniridia causes a progressive loss of corneal sensitivity

Fossil amber reveals the secret lives of Cretaceous ants

Predicting extreme rainfall through novel spatial modeling

The Lancet: First-ever in-utero stem cell therapy for fetal spina bifida repair is safe, study finds

Nanoplastics can interact with Salmonella to affect food safety, study shows

Eric Moore, M.D., elected to Mayo Clinic Board of Trustees

NYU named “research powerhouse” in new analysis

New polymer materials may offer breakthrough solution for hard-to-remove PFAS in water

Biochar can either curb or boost greenhouse gas emissions depending on soil conditions, new study finds

Nanobiochar emerges as a next generation solution for cleaner water, healthier soils, and resilient ecosystems

Study finds more parents saying ‘No’ to vitamin K, putting babies’ brains at risk

Scientists develop new gut health measure that tracks disease

Rice gene discovery could cut fertiliser use while protecting yields

Jumping ‘DNA parasites’ linked to early stages of tumour formation

[Press-News.org] Your pain meds' side effects may be masquerading as heart failure