Ambien
users wake up, smell the lawsuits
By
Nora Lockwood Tooher
Dolan Media Newswires
Janet
Makinen, a Florida housewife, was prescribed Ambien in 1998 for insomnia. About
two weeks later, she began walking in her sleep to her kitchen and devouring food.
It
didnt matter what kind of food, either. Makinen, 55, of Dade City, Fla.,
wolfed down raw eggs, uncooked rice, cans of vegetables, loaves of bread, and
bags of chips and candy.
An
hour after her binge-eating, shed wake up vomiting.
Makinen
gained so much weight from the nocturnal feedings that she ballooned from a size
1 to a size 12. She still suffers from stomach problems, including an ulcer.
She
stopped taking Ambien in 2005. And now shes suing Sanofi-Aventis, the manufacturer
of the popular prescription sleeping medication.
A
class-action suit filed March 6 in U.S. District Court in the Southern District
of New York claims that Ambien caused Makinen and hundreds of other users to enter
into trance-like states in which they drove cars, binged on food and engaged in
other activities they have no memory of.
The
suit accuses Sanofi-Aventis of inadequately warning users of the dangers of amnesic
sleep-eating, sleepwalking and sleep-driving.
New
York attorney Susan Chana Lask, who filed the suit, said that in addition to damages,
she wants the manufacturer to provide stronger warnings about Ambiens potential
dangers.
As
of March 22, about 500 other plaintiffs had joined the suit.
Ambien
was introduced to the market in 1993, but its sales have soared in the past few
years due mainly to an intensive consumer advertising campaign.
Last
year, an estimated 26.5 million prescriptions were dispensed for Ambien
more than double the number written in 2001 making it the nations
best-selling prescription sleeping pill.
Lask
said she first heard about the phenomenon of amnesic sleep-eating in an e-mail
from Makinen.
I
thought it was just crazy, Lask recalled. Who sleep-eats?
But
she mentioned the e-mail to her legal assistant, who said that she, too, had done
some somnambulistic food-foraging.
Thats
when Lask began researching the possible side effects of Ambien, which turn out
to include sleep-eating, sleepwalking and sleep-driving.
She
discovered bizarre behavior is not uncommon: They cook full meals, but theyre
disgusting meals. Theyre like zombies. Theyre just shoving things
in their mouths. Its this carnal thing.
And
the strange behavior that some users exhibit in their sleepwalking states occasionally
even lands them in jail much to their surprise, since amnesia is another
documented side effect.
Other
plaintiffs named in the class-action suit include:
Judith
Renee Lasswell, a Navy lieutenant in Florida who was arrested for shoplifting
DVDs and a candle from her naval base. She does not recall the alleged thefts.
Her
security clearance has been revoked, and she faces larceny charges and dishonorable
discharge from the Navy.
Christina
Brothers, a financial analyst who was prescribed Ambien for insomnia in May 2005.
After three days of taking her prescribed dose, she woke up on the concrete floor
of a jail cell. Brothers learned from a police report that she got out of bed
around 6 a.m., left her house, drove her mothers car into a parked vehicle,
left the scene and ran into another vehicle. She left that scene as well, returned
home, had a chat with her mother and was arrested in her bedroom later that morning.
She
remembers neither the accident, nor anything else from the morning of her arrest.
Kathleen
Callahan, a New York lab technician who claims there were mornings when she found
her refrigerator door open, crumbs on the floor, chocolate icing on her hands
and a ring of chocolate around her mouth. One morning she woke up in bed with
her hands in a potato chip box.
Callahan
also alleges she was twice sexually assaulted by a neighbor while in a sleepwalking
state.
One
New York pharmaceutical defense lawyer specializing in class actions, who asked
not to be named, said he thinks it is unlikely the New York case will proceed
as a class action, because physicians receive information about a medication from
many different sources and it could be difficult to isolate the communications
physicians had with the manufacturer.
Following
the recent news reports, Sanofi-Aventis issued a statement saying that sleepwalking
occurs in about 4 percent of the adult population, and that while events
of sleepwalking have occurred during treatment with Ambien, these instances cannot
be systemically linked to the product.
It
also said that a recent company analysis concluded that the current prescribing
information is accurate: Somnambulism is a possible rare adverse event.
The
manufacturer also reminded users that Ambien should only be taken when the user
can have eight hours of uninterrupted sleep, and that it should never be taken
with alcohol.
The
Food and Drug Administration says the drugs current warnings are adequate.
David
Benjamin, a toxicologist in Newton, Mass., said that while the strange side effects
of Ambien are very believable, a product liability suit against the manufacturer
faces an uphill challenge.
The
warnings say take the drug while youre in bed, and dont take it while
youre driving, he noted.
That
could make it difficult to prove a failure to warn claim, according
to Benjamin.
The
New York pharmaceutical defense lawyer suggested that Sanofi-Aventis possible
liability for its warnings about the risk of sleepwalking may hinge on whether
the company had documented the risk of Ambien-caused sleepwalking, and withheld
it from physicians and consumers.
Benjamin
also said that Ambien-impaired individuals arrested for criminal behavior could
argue a lack of intent, claiming they had no intent to drive a car
or engage in illegal activity.
On
The Road Again
Attorneys
who specialize in drunk-driving cases are already running into Ambien cases.
William
Head, an attorney in Atlanta who specializes in DUI defense, has defended several
drivers who landed in jail after sleep-driving episodes.
Youre
seeing people with not one blemish on their driving history suddenly charged with
a series of ridiculous driving situations, he said. They dont
know theyre driving.
Head
recently defended a man in Decatur, Ga., who had several drinks and took two Ambien.
The last thing he remembers is watching David Letterman on television.
He
was arrested on multiple driving charges, including driving on the wrong side
of the road. But a judge was unconvinced that Ambien was the cause of the mans
bizarre behavior, since he had also consumed alcohol. As a result, Heads
client was convicted of driving under the influence.
In
a new case, Head is representing a Florida businessman who took Ambien but hadnt
consumed any alcohol or other medications. When Fulton County, Ga. police pulled
him over for erratic driving, the mans pants were down around his ankles.
He
took it [Ambien] in the morning, Head said. The next thing, hes
driving in the broad daylight with his pants down.
Head
said he plans on arguing the case before a jury, which he hopes to educate about
the risk of sleep-driving while using Ambien.
The
key to me in these cases is if the person taking the medication had no prior episodes
of sleepwalking or sleep-driving, then thats a very good case, Head
said.
Because
[Ambiens] packaging materials in no way indicate the symptoms of getting
behind the wheel and not knowing youre there.
There
has also been at least one Ambien-related airline arrest.
Sean
Joyce, a British painting contractor, was on a flight from Charlotte, N.C. to
London last July. He had taken an Ambien pill and drunk several glasses of wine
when he got up, grabbed a young woman sitting next to him, started yelling and
ripped his shirt off.
Joyce
reportedly threatened to kill himself and everyone on the plane. He was handcuffed
and the plane was diverted to Boston.
He
woke up in a jail cell in East Boston with absolutely no memory of what happened,
said Michael C. Andrews, an attorney in Boston who defended Joyce.
Andrews
convinced federal authorities that Joyces aggressive behavior and amnesia
were caused by Ambien.
Under
a plea agreement, Joyce was sentenced to the five days he had already served.
Twilight
Zone
Benjamin,
the Massachusetts toxicologist, likened the bizarre effects of Ambien in certain
individuals to those of benzodiazepines, such as Halcion and Xanax.
Somehow,
they affect the brain adversely and people have this dissociative reaction where
they do weird things that they dont remember, he said.
Weve
known about these types of effects for date-rape drugs, he said. This
is a very, very similar reaction.
Ambien
is classified as a non-benzodiazepine hypnotic.
William
R. Johnson, a chemist at the Wisconsin State Laboratory of Hygiene, who studied
Ambien-impaired drivers in Wisconsin over a six-year period, said its not
clear why Ambien causes sleepwalking in some users. But he theorized that they
may partially awaken after four or five hours of sleep.
When
you get beyond that four-hour period, in some people the medication loses some
of its effect and it allows them to become semi-awake, but not conscious,
he said.
Sanofi-Aventis
has recently released a timed-release sleeping pill, AmbienCR, aimed at maintaining
a full eight hours of sleep.
Life
In The Slow Lane
Many
states dont test for Ambien when making impaired-driving arrests. But in
some state toxicology labs, Ambien is among the top 10 drugs found in impaired
drivers.
The
Wisconsin study identified Ambien in the bloodstreams of 187 drivers arrested
from 1999 through 2004. More than half of the Ambien-impaired drivers also tested
positive for alcohol, and nearly half tested positive for other drugs, including
benzodiazepines such as Valium, Xanax and Klonopin.
In
21 cases where Ambien was the only drug found, driving behavior ranged from hitting
light poles to running over curbs to driving in the wrong lane.
The
main characteristic of Ambien-impaired drivers was that they drove well below
the speed limit and kept driving until they hit something, according to Johnson.
The
slow speed was very common, and essentially driving until you couldnt drive
anymore. They tended to run into a stationary object, like a light pole or parked
car, he said.
In
five cases in which no alcohol or other drugs were found, Johnson said, police
reported that the Ambien-impaired drivers shared the same zombie-like characteristics.
They
seemed very much disoriented; their eyes wouldnt focus on individuals,
he said. They would just look right through a person.
This
article originally appeared in Lawyers Weekly USA, a sister publication of Wisconsin
Law Journal.