Pharmacology-Anti-Epileptic Drugs Flashcards

1
Q

What is the difference between a seizure and epilepsy?

A

Seizure: brain dysfunction from abnormal synchronous neuronal discharge. Epilepsy: disorder characterized by recurrent seizures.

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2
Q

How effective are anti-seizure drugs?

A

36% of patients are not seizure free (refractory).

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3
Q

What is the most prevalent etiology of epilepsy?

A

Idiopathic (genetic) epilepsy

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4
Q

What types of epilepsy are responsible for most adult onset epilepsies?

A

TBI, Infection, Tumor, Degenerative, Developmental abnormalities, Metabolic disorder, Cardiovascular disease, Substance toxicity.

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5
Q

What types of seizures are more difficult to control?

A

Symptomatic epilepsies caused by adult onset epilepsy.

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6
Q

Types of seizures

A

Partial: Simple, Complex, Secondarily Generalized. Generalized: Tonic-clonic, Absence.

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7
Q

What differentiates an absence seizure from a complex partial seizure?

A

*

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8
Q

Off-label

A

FDA approval is only for adjunct therapy (levetiracetam)

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9
Q

Refractory

A

Use is restricted

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10
Q

What drugs play a role in inhibiting high frequency action potential firing?

A

Na+ channel inhibitors. These slow recovery from the inactivated state and decrease frequency of action potentials.

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11
Q

How does lacosamide differ from the other sodium channel blocking anti-seizure drugs?

A

Lacosamide stabilizes slow inactivation of sodium channels and is not overcome by repolarization. The others target fast inactivation during the refractory period.

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12
Q

What anti-seizure drugs would cause the change seen below?

A

They modulate K+ channels to allow more K+ to exit the cell. This makes the resting membrane potential more negative.

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13
Q

What drugs play a role in inhibiting the pattern seen below?

A

T-type Ca2+ channel blockers inhibit synchronization of thalamocortical activity into spike and wave patterns.

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14
Q

What drugs play a large role in inhibiting neurotransmitter release?

A

Ca2+ VGC blockers. No Ca2+ entry means no excitatory neurotransmitter release to propagate seizures.

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15
Q

What drugs play a large role in inhibiting EPSPs?

A

Levetiracetam hits SV2A vesicular protein that packages glutamate. High doses of phenobarbital inhibit AMPA receptors.

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16
Q

What drugs play a large role in enhancement of IPSPs?

A

Phenobarbital enhances Cl- entry. Valproate enhances Glutamic Acid Decarboxylase (GAD) and inhibits GABA-Transaminase (GABA-T). Vigabatrin irreversibly inhibits GABA-T.

17
Q

Most anti seizure drugs have a low therapeutic index, what are very common side effects you see with these drugs?

A

Rash and suicide.

18
Q

What anti seizure drug can cause this side effect?

A

This is gingival hyperplasia. It is a side effect of phenytoin.

19
Q

What drug is the sporadic rapid increase in plasma drug concentration seen in the patient population below characteristic of?

A

Phenytoin. The dose relationship is not linear because liver enzymes can become saturated.

20
Q

You put a patient on an anti seizure drug and after a few days she becomes hyponatremic. She is also at high risk for Stevens-Johnson syndrome. What drug was prescribed?

A

Carbamazepine. It increases ADH secretion, increases water retention and can cause hyponatremia.

21
Q

Why screen HLA-B screen patients before prescribing them carbamazepine?

A

Stevens-Johnson syndrome (toxic epidermal necrolysis). Asians with a specific HLA-B gene have a high incidence of these conditions with use of carbamezapine.

22
Q

You put a patient on an anti seizure drug and after a few days she becomes hyponatremic. She is also at lower risk for Stevens-Johnson syndrome compared to being on carbamazepine. What drug was prescribed?

A

Oxcarbazepine. It still increases ADH levels, but has a different intermediate in metabolism which reduces incidence of Stevens-Johnson syndrome.

23
Q

What anti seizure drug is commonly used in infants?

A

Infants

24
Q

What anti seizure drugs are often used for chronic pain and have little drug interactions?

A

Gabapentin & Pregabalin. They are excreted unchanged by the kidneys.

25
Q

What anti seizure drug has negligible drug interactions, but has been shown to cause behavioral changes, irritability and psychosis?

A

Levetiracetam.

26
Q

What drug limits axonal sprouting and has adverse effects of sedation, dizziness, ataxia, abnormal gait, diplopia & nystagmus? What other problems is this drug associated with?

A

Lacosamide. It blocks Na+ channels & CRMP-2, which limits axonal sprouting. These drugs can also cause problems in cardiac patients (atrial flutter, a-fib, heart block).

27
Q

What anti seizure drug is a schedule V controlled substance?

A

Lacosamide. The side effects of sedation and dizziness make it abusable.

28
Q

Use of ethosuximide

A

Only clinical use is for absence seizures.

29
Q

What anti seizure drug absolutely requires liver tests before taking it?

A

Valproate. It inhibits hepatic enzymes and can cause idiosyncratic hepatotoxicity, pancreatitis and hyperammonemia.

30
Q

What anti seizure drug is used exclusively in adults due to increased risk of Stevens-Johnson syndrome in children (especially those comedicated w/valproate as the patient seen below)?

A

Lamotrigine. Valproate inhibits CYP450, which is responsible for lamotrigine metabolism.

31
Q

What anti seizure drug is the only drug that causes dramatic weight loss and is associated with metabolic acidosis and renal calculi?

A

Topiramate. It is also a carbonic anhydrase inhibitor, which explains metabolic aciosis and renal calculi.

32
Q

What anti seizure drug is reserved for severe refractory use, complex partial seizures or infantile spasms?

A

Vigabatrin. It is associated with permanent vision loss in 1/3 of patients and can cause psychosis, hence its status as a refractory drug.

33
Q

Why do carbamazepine, phenobarbital and phenytoin all have lots of drug interactions? What about valproic acid?

A

Carbamazepine, phenobarbital and phenytoin all induce hepatic enzymes and valproate inhibits hepatic enzymes.

34
Q

What special P450 interactions do you need to consider when you prescribe carbamazepine, felbamate, phenytoin, phenobarbital, oxcarbazepine or topiramate?

A

They reduce oral contraceptive levels so dosing will need to be increased and they may cause osteoporosis.

35
Q

Off label uses for anti seizure drugs

A

*

36
Q

A patient comes to the ED after 10 minutes of continuous tonic-clonic seizure activity without any recovery in between. How do you treat this patient?

A

This patient is in status epilepticus. If you can treat within 30 minutes you can save their life. You want to give them diazepam or lorazepam ASAP to stop the seizure. You then load with a long-acting anti seizure drug like phenytoin. If that doesn’t work you induce iatrogenic coma to stop the seizure with propofal, midazolam or pentobarbital.

37
Q

What people are at high risk for status epilepticus?

A

*

38
Q

A mother brings her baby in complaining of brief, shock-like muscle contractions. How do you treat this baby?

A

The child is having myoclonic spasms characteristic of infantile spasms. ACTH (corticotropin) and prednisone are first line therapy.

39
Q

A mother brings her baby in complaining of seizures in her 1 year old. He has a fever. How do you treat this child?

A

Normally you don’t. If the child is prone to febrile seizures you give rectal diazepam during fever. However, if there is family history you may consider medication.