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by laen 3747 days ago
The linked chart dated 2012 lists cetrizine and loratadine as "possible" anticholinergics. It appears they will equally put you at risk. So what are allergy sufferers alternatives? I'm dependent on loratadine and a little dismayed to just now learn of this even if the correlation is not clear.

Guess I'll just have to start eating a bunch of honey...

[1] http://www.agingbraincare.org/uploads/products/ACB_scale_-_l...?

4 comments

Fexofenadine/Allegra was reviewed and not added. This is fortunate as it's the only OTC allergy medication that actually works for me.
Same - just took a generic fexofenadine, in fact. Of course, 5 years ago, everybody thought diphenhydramine was safe, too.

But is there a "safe minimum frequency"? Generally, I try to avoid taking any medication more/longer than necessary, and my bottle of diphenhydramine is still mostly full after many years...

montelukast (sadly not OTC in the US) isn't known to have an anticholinergic effect, same with most nasal sprays afaik (with the exception of ipratropium bromide). i've had great success with montelukast+cetirizine+flonase.

(and ditto the other comment saying the honey thing is bogus - i eat a lot of local honey because it's tasty, but it makes no impact on my seasonal allergies.)

Bit of a thinking-outside-the-box suggestion here, but have you tried something like mindfulness? Allergy, inflammation and stress seem to be linked in some way, so changing your mindset might reduce the response that you are blocking with loratadine. I personally (in a totally unscientific way) think that low level stress acts like an amplifier for these sorts of conditions.