Drug effects on salivary glands: dry mouth
- PMID: 12974516
- DOI: 10.1034/j.1601-0825.2003.03967.x
Drug effects on salivary glands: dry mouth
Abstract
Objective: To identify drugs associated with the complaint of dry mouth.
Materials and methods: MEDLINE was searched for papers 1980-2002 using keywords, oral, mouth, salivary, drugs, dry mouth and xerostomia, and relevant secondary references were hand-searched.
Results: Evidence was forthcoming for a number of xerogenic drugs, especially antimuscarinic agents, some sympathomimetic agents, and agents affecting serotonin and noradrenaline uptake, as well as a miscellany of other drugs such as appetite suppressants, protease inhibitors and cytokines.
Conclusion: Dry mouth has a variety of possible causes but drugs--especially those with anticholinergic activity against the M3 muscarinic receptor--are the most common cause of reduced salivation.
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