Epilepsy treatment Flashcards

1
Q

basic mechanism

A

excess excitation - glutamate

insufficient inhibition - GABA

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2
Q

phenytoin

A

mechanism:

adverse effects:

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3
Q

ethosuxamide

A

children with absence seizures

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4
Q

Na valproate

A

caution in women of childbearing age - spina bifida, lower IQ
for any generalised epilepsy
general rule - use if unsure

weight gain, parkinsonism

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5
Q

NICE

A

avoid: carbamazepine

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6
Q

lamotrigine

A

partial seizure under certain circumstances

if used as monotherapy start 25mg/d up to max. hjalve doses if used with sodium valproate, double if on phenytoin or carbamazepine

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7
Q

levetiracetam

A

tiredness, dizziness, aggression

safe to use in pregnancy, any adverse effects are as yet unknown
try and use as few drugs as possible to reduce teratogenicity

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8
Q

carbamazepine

A

partial and focal seizures

initial dose 100mg/12h, increase by 200mg/d every 2 weeks up to a max of 1000mg/12h
SE: leucopenia, diplopia, blurred vision, impaired balance, drowsiness, mild generalised rash, SIADH (rare)

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9
Q

side effects

A
skin rash (hypersensitivity)
ataxic gait
tremor
teratogenicity - spina bifida
wieght gain
behavioural disturbance
also beware drug interactions
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10
Q

starting meds

A

start low and slowly increase until Sx free
if seizures fail to respond, reconsider diagnosis
add new first line drug and gradually reduce 2nd drug until Sx control optimal

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11
Q

protein binding

A

many of these drugs are protein bound

albumin levels will then have an effect on toxicity

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12
Q

protein binding

A

many of these drugs are protein bound

albumin levels will then have an effect on toxicity

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13
Q

efficacy

A

47% seizure free in 1st AED

14% seizure free on 2nd or 3rd AED

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14
Q

efficacy

A

47% seizure free in 1st AED
14% seizure free on 2nd or 3rd AED
if not reassess diagnosis, consider surgery, and vagal nerve stimulation

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15
Q

efficacy

A

47% seizure free in 1st AED
14% seizure free on 2nd or 3rd AED
if not reassess diagnosis, consider surgery, and vagal nerve stimulation

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16
Q

status epilepticus

A

ABC
high flow O2
IV lorazepam or diazepam (buccal/rectal)
if no response, use phenytoin (watch for hypotension, arrhythmias)
if still uncontrolled seek further help, ICU, propofol, thiopentone

17
Q

generalised tonic-clonic seizures

A

sodium valproate or lamotrigine (often better tolerated, less teratogenic) 1st line
then carbamazepine or topiramate

18
Q

absence seizures

A

sodium valproate, lamotrigine or ethosuximide

19
Q

tonic, atonic, myoclonic seizures

A

as for generalised:
sodium valproate or lamotrigine (often better tolerated, less teratogenic) 1st line
but AVOID carbamazepine, which may worsen seizures

20
Q

partial seizures (+/- secondary generalization)

A

carbamazepine 1st line

then sodium valproate, lamotrigine

21
Q

status epilepticus

A

open and maintain airway
recovery position
insert oral/nasal airway, intubate if necessary

high flow O2 and, if required, suction

IV access, take blood (U&E, LFT, FBC, BM, Ca2+)

slow IV bolus phase - to stop seizures:
eg lorazepam, 2-4mg. give second dose if no reaction in 10mins

thiamine 250mg IV over 30min if alcoholism/malnourishment suspected (and glucose, unless known to be normal)

correct hypotension with IV fluids

IV infusion phase:
phenytoin 15-20mg/kg IVI or diazepam infusion
monitor ECG and BP

general anaesthesia phase:
continuing seizures require specialist help with paralysis and ventilation