Pharmacological treatments of epilepsy Flashcards

1
Q

Antiepileptic drugs

A

Do not prevent the development of epilepsy

most drugs work to prevent the spread of epileptic discharges

Control epilepsy’s major symptoms: the seizure, not the cause

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2
Q

Increased activity in the brain may be attributed to

A

Increased membrane excitability

Increased efficiency of excitatory synaptic transmission- glutamate

Decreased efficiency of inhibitory synaptic transmission- GABA

Treatments aimed at opposing these actions

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3
Q

Reducing membrane excitability: Na+ channel blockers

A

Selective actions at the channel may control seizures without affecting normal transmission

Normal neuronal firing is not impaired

When neuronal activity increases, it is inhibited by drugs, thereby preventing seizure spread

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4
Q

Anticonvulsant drugs Na+ channel blockers

A

Phenytoin

Lamotrogine

Carbamezapine

Zonisamide

Lacosamide

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5
Q

Carbamezapine/ oxcarbazepine and eslicarbazepine

A

Competitively inhibit the voltage gate sodium channel by binding with the receptor in its inactive state

Prolongs the period between successive firings

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6
Q

Reducing efficiency of excitatory synaptic transmission- glutamate

A

Obvious target is glutamate receptors

Problem separating therapeutic effect from side effects

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7
Q

Perampanel

A

Non-competitive blockade of AMPA glutamate receptor

Reduce spread/ generalisation of seizure

Well tolerated with improved alertness

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8
Q

Controlling transmitter relase

A

Ca2+ channels voltage activated and require strong membrane depolarisation for gating

Several anticonvulsant drugs work this wat

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9
Q

Increase efficiency of inhibitory synaptic transmission- GABA

A

Focal epilepsy characterised by intermittent high amplitude discharges

Synchronous depolarisation followed by hyperpolarisation reflecting activation of GABA inhibition

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10
Q

Facilitators of GABAergic transmission

A

Sodium valproate

Benzodiazepines

Barbiturates

Tiagabine

Vigabatrin

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11
Q

Levetiracetam

A

High affinity synaptic vesicle protein 2A ligand

Modulates neurotransmitter release

Rapidly titrated and is effected

Keep patient alert by mood lowering/ agitation side effects

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12
Q

Ideal antiepileptic agent

A

Good efficiency, easy and rapid to titrate

No drug-drug interactions

No cognitive side effects

No bone marrow suppression

No affective/ drowsy side effects

Different routes of administration

Cost effective

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13
Q

Primary generalised epilepsy

A

Sodium valproate, lamotrigine first line

Broad spectrum antiepileptic drugs

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14
Q

Partial epilepsy

A

Carbamazepine, lamotrigine first line

All other antiepileptic drugs have efficacy

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15
Q

Drugs that exacerbate generalised seizure type

A

Phenytoin

Carbamazepine

Gabapentin/ pregabalin

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16
Q

Benzodiazepine side effects

A

Dose related

  • drowsiness
  • ataxia
  • hyperactivity
  • personality change
  • cognitive impairment

Long term
- tolerance/ dependence

17
Q

Phenytoin side effects

A

Dose related

  • ataxia
  • diplopia
  • nystagmus

Long term

  • gingival hyperplasia
  • osteamalacia
  • cerebellar atrophy
18
Q

Sodium valproate side effects

A

Dose related

  • sedation
  • nausea and vomiting
  • tremor

Long term

  • hair thinning
  • weight gain
  • menstrual irregularities
  • encephalopathy
19
Q

Teratogenicity

A

Most anticonvulsatns implicated in congenital

Birth defects- less data for newer agents

Sodium valproate- affects cognitive development, reduced IQ in infants

Epilepsy pregnancy register- voluntary

20
Q

Drug drug interactions

A

CYP450 liver enzymes most implicated