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Dive into the research topics where Gill Livingston is active.

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Featured researches published by Gill Livingston.


Alzheimers & Dementia | 2009

Controversies In Anticholinergic Medication Use And Cognitive Impairment

Chris Fox; Kathryn Richardson; Malaz Boustani; Ian Maidment; David Smithard; Cornelius Katona; Gill Livingston; George M. Savva; Simon Coulton; Fiona Mathews; Carol Brayne

As many as 40% of older people are prescribed medications with anticholinergic activity. Studies have suggested the significant effect of anticholinergic medication on cognition but there is controversy. Objective: Analysis of 15908 patients impact of anticholinergic drugs on cognition. Methods: The anticholinergic burden scale (ABS) coded drugs 0 (none), 1 (mild), 2 (moderate), or 3 (severe). Scores were summed for each participant to give a total Anticholinergic Cognitive Burden (ACB) score. Study 1 MRC CFAS with 11,994 participants and cross sectional coding part of a 19 year longitudinal; Study 2 LASER-AD - Dementia Specific 18 month longitudinal with 224 participants. Study 3 SAP REDS USA 1 year follow up with 3690 participants. Study 1 MRC-CFAS - A statistically significant dose-response relation was observed between increasing ACB score and decreasing MMSE, e.g. those with an ACB score of 5 or greater were associated with making 21% (95%CI 8%-35%) more errors on the MMSE. The relationship with cognitive impairment was only seen for ACB conferred by Central Nervous System medications, in particular antipsychotics. Study 2 LASER AD - Anti-cholinergic burden had no significant effect on cognitive decline at 18 months as assessed by the ADAS-cog. The ADAS-cog decreased by a mean of 4.63 in the cohort of patients with an ACB of 0, compared with a mean decrease of 7.4 in patients with an ACB of>0 (mean difference=2.83; t=1.107; df=100; p=0.271; CI-2.24-7.9). Study 3 SAP REDS - Anticholinergic burden for 60 days was associated with a significant effect on cognitive decline as measured by the Community Screening Interview for Dementia odds ratio 1.55p<0.05 (CI-1.05-2.29) with a possible burden dose response effect. Conclusion: An inverse relation existed between the anticholinergic burden of current medication use and cognition in study 1 and study 3; in study 1 the association was driven by the ACB of CNS medications. However, in study 2 no association was detected. Thus the abandonment of use of medication with anticholinergic effects may not be warranted. Further research is required to determine the clinical relevance.


Ageing & Society | 1998

A qualitative study of adjustment to caring for an older spouse with psychiatric illness

Joanna Murray; Gill Livingston


Archive | 2002

Drug Treatment in Old Age psychiatry

Cornelius Katona; Gill Livingston


Archive | 2010

Non-pharmacological therapies to manage behavioural and psychological symptoms of dementia: what works and what doesn't

Gill Livingston; Claudia Cooper


Archive | 2006

Research report Coping strategies and anxiety in caregivers of people with Alzheimer's disease: The LASER-AD study

Claudia Cooper; Cornelius Katona; Martin Orrell; Gill Livingston


The Polish Journal of Old Age Psychiatry , 1 (3) pp. 175-184. (2004) | 2004

The relationships between neuropsychiatric symptoms, cognitive deficit and psychotropic prescription in Alzheimer's Disease: The LASER-AD study

Georgina Train; Cornelius Katona; Gill Livingston


Archive | 2017

Response to galantamine may be greater in patients homozygous for the ApoE4 allele

Cornelius Katona; Gill Livingston


Archive | 2014

Scoring of studies for quality of evidence

Gill Livingston; Lynsey Kelly; Elanor Lewis-Holmes; Gianluca Baio; Stephen E. Morris; Nishma Patel; Rumana Z. Omar; Cornelius Katona; Claudia Cooper


Archive | 2014

Effect of removing studies where the outcome measures are invalid or unreliable or both

Gill Livingston; Lynsey Kelly; Elanor Lewis-Holmes; Gianluca Baio; Stephen E. Morris; Nishma Patel; Rumana Z. Omar; Cornelius Katona; Claudia Cooper


Archive | 2014

Notes abstraction form

Steve Iliffe; Amy Waugh; Marie Poole; Claire Bamford; Katie Brittain; Carolyn Chew-Graham; Chris Fox; Cornelius Katona; Gill Livingston; Jill Manthorpe; Nick Steen; Barbara Stephens; Vanessa Hogan; Louise Robinson

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Julie Barber

University College London

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Anne Lanceley

University College London

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Isla Wallace

University College London

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