The Dangers of Lorazepam
Physical Health Risks
Impaired Attention and alertness
People taking lorazepam who may drive, operate heavy machinery, or engage in other potentially dangerous physical activities should take great care. One is advised to take time first to learn how they react to lorazepam before engaging in any of these, since lorazepam, like all benzodiazepines, impairs attention and alertness.
Lorazepam and Breastfeeding
Lorazepam is pregnancy category D (in the U.S.) as there is evidence for harm when taken during a pregnancy. It crosses the placental barrier and may cause fetal deformities when taken during the first trimester. Use during pregnancy has resulted in infants born with respiratory depression and
hypothermia. Regular use in the third trimester can result in neonatal withdrawal syndrome.
The benefit to lactating mothers of taking lorazepam must be weighed against risks this poses to neonates from lorazepam in breast milk which has been shown to cause sedation, inability to suckle, and irritability.
Drug Interactions with UGT inducers
Possible increase of lorazepam dose should be considered when taking UGT (uridine diphosphate glucuronosyltransferase) inducers such as phenobarbital, phenytoin, and rifampin. Since these induce increased activity of the main enzyme responsible for metabolizing lorazepam into its inactive metabolites, their use decreases lorazepam blood levels and therefore its effects, possibly precipitating withdrawal symptoms in lorazepam dependent or addicted individuals.
Reported Deaths
A study of sedative and anxiolytic involvement in poisoning deaths in New Zealand in 2001 found lorazepam to have been involved in 2 deaths, but to be among the safest of
sedatives with a rate of 1.9 deaths per million defined daily doses dispensed (compared to
alprazolam's 16, temazepam's 2.1,
clonazepam's 16.1, diazepam’s of 5.2 and
zopiclone's of 0.59.
Mental Health Risks
Hallucinations, Suicidal Ideation and Paradoxical Reactions
Lorazepam can in rare cases cause hallucinations, confusion, depression, suicidal and/or thoughts of self-harm. These are also potentially very serious, the medication should be stopped and immediate medical assistance sought. Paradoxical reactions also occur in which a person becomes hyperactive, agitated and hostile.
Rebound Insomnia and Anxiety
Rebound insomnia and rebound anxiety can be caused when lorazepam is stopped too abruptly, especially if the use has been long term and/or at higher than normal therapeutic doses. effects have been shown to happen with as short a course of lorazepam as 7 days.
Cognitive and Memory Deficiences
Lorazepam, like all benzodiazepines, there is health risk of causing forgetfulness, rebound amnesia, and difficulty with some cognitive tasks and concentration. Lorazepam has been shown to impair both explicit and implicit memory, unlike other benzodiazepines.
Side Effects
Like many medications, lorazepam can cause an allergic reaction, but this is uncommon. Symptoms of an allergic reaction may include swelling of lips, throat, tongue and face, trouble breathing and hives. If this occurs medical help must be sought immediately since allergic reactions progress very quickly and they can be fatal, though death as an outcome is fairly rare.
Addiction
Physical Addiction
Given intravenously, lorazepam can be even more dependence and addiction causing than when taken orally, especially if intravenous use occurs over a protracted period of time. Stopping lorazepam without tapering may cause withdrawal. Lorazepam withdrawal symptoms can include headache, sweating, rebound insomnia and anxiety, dizziness, numbness/tingling of extremities, hypersensitivity to: sounds, light, noise, tactile sensations, and perceptual changes, involuntary movements, nausea, vomiting, diarrhea, loss of appetite, hallucinations/delirium, convulsions/seizures, tremor, abdominal cramps, myalgia, palpitations,
tachycardia, hyperreflexia, and
hyperthermia. Seizures may be more common for individuals with pre-existing seizure disorders or on drugs or medications that lower seizure threshold.
Mental Addiction
Lorazepam, especially used long-term (more than two to four weeks), can cause dependence and mental addiction. Abruptly stopping lorazepam in these circumstances may cause anxiety, tension, depression, insomnia, restlessness, agitation, confusion, irritability, dysphoria, derealization, panic attacks, vertigo, depersonalization, and short-term memory loss.