Anticonvulsants for Pharmacology and Therapeutics Flashcards
What is an epileptic seizure?
Manifestation of an abnormal or excessive synchronised discharge of a set of cerebral neurones
What is epilepsy?
A tendency to recurrent, unprovoked seizures
What are the two main types of epilepsy?
Partial/Focal – the excess discharge is localised to one area of the brain
Generalised – the synchronised discharge affects all brain areas
When are the two peaks in incidence of epilepsy and what are they usually caused by?
Young adults – where genetic predispositions begin to manifest
Later years – when patients start getting brain injuries e.g. stroke
What proportion of epilepsy is idiopathic?
70%
What is a key characteristic of absence seizures?
3 Hz brain activity
What are the possible harms that can be done to the patient by giving anti-epileptic drug therapy?
Psychosocial consequences (illness status etc.) Idiosynchratic and dose-related
State some factors influencing the decision to treat.
Number of seizures at presentation
Seizure type and severity
Cause of seizure
What are the main mechanisms of anti-epileptic drugs?
Enhancing GABA-mediated inhibition
Inhibiting glutamate-mediated excitation
Na+ channel blockade (blocking nerve conduction)
Calcium channel blockade
Give an example of a group of drugs that enhance GABA-mediated inhibition.
Benzodiazepines
Name two drugs that inhibit glutamate-mediated excitation.
Presynaptic – levatiracetam
Postsynaptic – parampanel
Name three drugs that exert their effect as AEDs by blocking action potentials (Na+ channel blockade).
Phenytoin
Carbamazepine
Lamotrigine
What is the main mechanism of current anti-epileptic drugs?
Sodium channel blockade
It causes use-dependency blockade meaning that it only blocks the nerve conduction when the neurones are firing excessively (i.e. during a seizure) and so the drugs inhibit seizures without affecting normal cognitive function
What does Levatiracetam bind to in order to inhibit glutamate release?
SV2A
This is a protein found on the synaptic vesicle membrane
What are the two main excitatory receptors?
AMPA and Kainate (Na+/Ca2+ channel)
NMDA