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Common drugs have different effects on male and female mice's brains

  • May 19, 2025
  • 1 min read

pills with different sizes and colours

New research from Sweden has shown that combinations of prescribed drugs may influence sex-specific brain function. 


Polypharmacy – taking five or more medications together – is common among older adults.  

Researchers at EARA member Karolinska Institute tested different combinations of commonly prescribed drugs - including analgesics, anti-depressants and cardiovascular medications - on mice with Alzheimer’s-like symptoms.  


In male mice, the combination of five drugs - paracetamol, aspirin, citalopram, simvastatin and metoprolol - improved memory and brain inflammation, and also reduced the accumulation of amyloid plaques in the brain, a hallmark of Alzheimer’s. Female mice, however, showed no improvement.  


When some of these drugs - simvastatin and metoprolol - were replaced with drugs of the same class - atorvastatin and enalapril - female memory worsened and male improvements disappeared, showing sex-and drug-specific effects.  


Published in Alzheimer’s & Dementia, the study suggests that drug effects may vary by sex, a variation that has been historically disregarded in research. Favourable drug combinations will now need to be tested in human clinical studies. 

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