New Sleeping Pill Approved
New Sleeping Pill Approved
Longer-Lasting Lunesta for All-Night Sleep
Dec. 16, 2004 -- The FDA has approved a new, longer-lasting sleeping pill.
The new pill is Lunesta, formerly known as Estorra. Sepracor, Inc. manufactures it. Like the currently approved drugs Ambien and Sonata, Lunesta is a new-generation sleep drug that isn't addictive and doesn't require larger and larger doses during long-term use.
Clinical trials show that Lunesta helps people get to sleep faster. But its greatest virtue may be that it helps people sleep through the night. That's a particular problem for elderly patients suffering from insomnia.
The FDA has approved Lunesta for patients who have difficulty falling asleep as well as for patients who are unable to sleep through the night.
Ambien and the shorter-acting Sonata have revolutionized the treatment of insomnia, says Martin B. Scharf, PhD, director of the Center for Research in Sleep Disorders in Cincinnati, and a psychiatry professor at Wright State University School of Medicine in Dayton, Ohio.
"Our thinking about insomniamedications is a completely different animal from what it was in the past. Before Ambien, all of us were in the dark ages," Scharf told WebMD in a March 2004 interview. "We were reluctant to treat pain because of these problems with the drugs that we had. What we are appreciating with these new compounds … is that they can be taken over the long term. There is no evidence of dependence or need for dose escalation with these newer medications. It makes more sense to get a good night's sleep than to worry about these side effects."
Timothy A. Roehrs, PhD, director of research at the Sleep Disorders and Research Center at Henry Ford Hospital in Detroit, says one major goal for sleeping pills is to have an effect that lasts for a person's normal sleep time and then wears off quickly.
"Ambien does do that. It is the most popular current drug," Roehrs told WebMD in a March 2004 interview. "[Lunesta] has about a six-hour half life, so it is more likely to maintain sleep. If, specifically, sleep maintenance is your problem, this might work better than Ambien."
New Sleeping Pill Approved.
Longer-Lasting Lunesta for All-Night Sleep
Dec. 16, 2004 -- The FDA has approved a new, longer-lasting sleeping pill.
The new pill is Lunesta, formerly known as Estorra. Sepracor, Inc. manufactures it. Like the currently approved drugs Ambien and Sonata, Lunesta is a new-generation sleep drug that isn't addictive and doesn't require larger and larger doses during long-term use.
Clinical trials show that Lunesta helps people get to sleep faster. But its greatest virtue may be that it helps people sleep through the night. That's a particular problem for elderly patients suffering from insomnia.
The FDA has approved Lunesta for patients who have difficulty falling asleep as well as for patients who are unable to sleep through the night.
Ambien and the shorter-acting Sonata have revolutionized the treatment of insomnia, says Martin B. Scharf, PhD, director of the Center for Research in Sleep Disorders in Cincinnati, and a psychiatry professor at Wright State University School of Medicine in Dayton, Ohio.
"Our thinking about insomniamedications is a completely different animal from what it was in the past. Before Ambien, all of us were in the dark ages," Scharf told WebMD in a March 2004 interview. "We were reluctant to treat pain because of these problems with the drugs that we had. What we are appreciating with these new compounds … is that they can be taken over the long term. There is no evidence of dependence or need for dose escalation with these newer medications. It makes more sense to get a good night's sleep than to worry about these side effects."
Timothy A. Roehrs, PhD, director of research at the Sleep Disorders and Research Center at Henry Ford Hospital in Detroit, says one major goal for sleeping pills is to have an effect that lasts for a person's normal sleep time and then wears off quickly.
"Ambien does do that. It is the most popular current drug," Roehrs told WebMD in a March 2004 interview. "[Lunesta] has about a six-hour half life, so it is more likely to maintain sleep. If, specifically, sleep maintenance is your problem, this might work better than Ambien."
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