Epilepsy.2 Flashcards

1
Q

Definition?

A

tendency to recurrent, usually spontaneous, epileptic seizures

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2
Q

What happens in the brain for epileptic seizures to occur? (4)

  • how long do they last?
  • Why do they occur? (6)
  • what are some causative factors?
A

abnormal synchronisation of neuronal activity
(usually excitatory with high frequency APs, sometimes predominantly inhibitory)
Get an interruption of normal brain activity either focally or generalised

-usually for secs-mins

-too much excitation/too little inhibition
Changes to: cell no./type, connectivity, synaptic function, voltage gated ion channel function

-genetic, acquired, metabolic, toxic and environmental

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3
Q

Classification of epileptic seizures

-give the 3 broad categories and their subtypes (2,5,0)

A

-partial and generalised

partial
simple (without impaired consciousness)
complex (with impaired consciousness)

Generalised
(These can start focally)
absence
Myoclonic
Atonic
Tonic
Tonic clonic (primary generalised)

Unclassified

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4
Q

Partial seizures

-what 3 different forms are there?

A

Motor
(rhythmic jerking, posturing, head and eye deviation, other movements, automatisms, vocalisation)
Sensory
(somatosensory, olfactory, gustatory, visual, auditory)
Psychic
(memories, deja vu, depersonalisation, aphasia, hallucinations)

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5
Q

Primary generalised epilepsy

  • onset?
  • inv?
  • treatment?
  • example?
A
  • childhood or teens
  • EEG
  • sodium valproate or lamotrigine

-juvanile myoclonic epilepsy
(early morning jerks, generalised seizures, risk with sleep deprivation and flashing lights)

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6
Q

Focal onset epilepsy

  • cause?
  • onset?
  • treatment?
  • what kind of seizure occurs often?
A
  • underlying structural cause
  • any age, focal onset which can then generalise
  • Carbamazepine or lamotrigine
  • complex partial seizures with hippocampal sclerosis
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7
Q
Anti-epileptic drugs 
name the drugs that act on the following aspects of neurotransmission and their effect:
-Voltage gated Na channels (3)
-Voltage gated K channels (1)
-SV2A (1)
-Voltage gated Ca channel (2) 

Name the drugs that acts in the following aspects of the GABA system and their effect

  • GABA synthesis (1)
  • GABA transporter (1)
  • GABA transaminase (1)
  • GABAa receptor (4)
A

-Na influx increases excitability an drives APs so inhibition reduces this
carbamazepine, lamotrigine, oxcarbazepine

-K efflux reduces neuronal excitability so activity is increased by retigabine

  • required from the release of NTs from vesicles
    Inhibited by levetiracetam
  • Ca influx drives NT release so inhibited by pregabalin & gabapentin
  • sodium valproate enhances synthesis
  • normally removes GABA from the synapse, inhibited by tiagabine
  • degrades GABA, inhibited by vigabatrin
  • reduces neuronal excitability, activity increased by Benzodiazepines, barbiturates, felbamate, topiramate
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8
Q

What drugs are first line in the following types of epilepsy?

  • Partial seizures (3)
  • absence seizure (2)
  • Myoclonic (3)
  • Atonic, tonic, generalised tonic clonic (2)
A

-Carbamazepine
Lamotrigine
add on = gabapentin

  • Sodium valproate, ethosuximide
  • Sodium valproate, levetiracetam, clonazepam
  • socium valproate, levetiracetam
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