Epilepsy Flashcards

1
Q

molecular targets and actions of antiepileptic drugs

A

limit excitability or enhance inhibition

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2
Q

voltage gated sodium channels

A

membrane ion channel involved in action potential generation. stabilize inactive state inhibiting recurrent depolarization. phenytoin, carbamazepine, oxcarbamazepine, lamotrigine.

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3
Q

voltage gated calcium channels

A

presynaptic membrane channels. blocking influx of Ca leads to less excitatory neurotransmitter release. useful in treating in neuropathic pain. ethosuximide hits T type in thalamus. Gabapentin and pregabalin hit high voltage type

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4
Q

glutamate receptors

A

post synaptic membrane of excitatory synapses. ligand gated cation channels. Felbamate is NMDA receptor blocker. Topiramate is partially active as AMPA and Kainate receptor blocker. Selective and specific AMPA and Kainate receptor blockers are in development

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5
Q

GABA system

A

GABA-A receptors are found on post synaptic membranes of inhibitory synapses. ligand gated Cl channels. Phenobarbitol and benzodiazepines activate receptors.

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6
Q

voltage gated sodium channel drugs

A

stabilize inactive state inhibiting recurrent depolarization. similar efficacy, similar metabolism, similar toxicity. hepatic enzyme inducers. phenytoin, carbamazepine, oxcarbamazepine, lamotrigine

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7
Q

carbamazepine

A

sodium channel blocker. sedation, ataxia, and doplopia are toxicity. adverse reactions: rash, mild hepatic enzyme elevation, mild myelosuppression. more effective for complex partial epilepsy than primary generalized. also used for bipolar affective and neuropathic pain

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8
Q

carbamazepine pharmacologic considerations

A

highly protein bound. autoinduction. induces own metabolism. heteroinduction: induces metabolism of other drugs (like birth control). short half life, extended release preparations needed. toxicity due to epoxide metabolite

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9
Q

phenytoin

A

sodium channel blocker. dizziness, nystagmus, ataxia, incoordination toxicity. adverse reactions: mild hepatotoxicity and myelosuppression, gingival hyperplasia, rash, hirsutism, lupus like rxn. long term cerebellar degeneration, peripheral neurpathy, osteoporosis. IV infusion limited by hypotension. effective against tonic clonic seizures of primary generalized epilepsy or partial onset and secondarily generalized seizures. effective for acute seizures

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10
Q

phenytoin pharmacologic consideration

A

highly protein bound. hepatic metabolism. enzyme inducer. effects other hepatically metabolized meds. can be associated with contraceptive failure. variable but longer half life. IV route useful in status epilepticus

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11
Q

oxcarbazepine

A

same efficacy and indications as carbamazepine. designed to bypass carbamazepine epoxide. less protein bound, less autoinduction, less toxic, longer half life. useful for neuropathic pain

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12
Q

lamotrigine

A

sodium channel blocker. dizziness, sedation, ataxia, diplopia toxicity. rash is dose related, slow initial titration is important. effective for primary generalized epilepsy, partial complex epilep, and secondary generalization, and absence. good for kids. can make myoclonic seizures worse. used in bipolar and neuropathic pain

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13
Q

lamotrigine pharm considerations

A

hepatic metabolism. less protein bound. hepatic enzyme inducer. can cause contraceptive failure. competes for excretion with valproic acid. synergistic action with depakote.

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14
Q

benzodiazepines

A

used in status epilepticus. acts at GABA-A receptors. dose limited by sedation. long term usefullness limited by tolerance. short acting due to redistribution. midazolam used in anesthesia or refractory status epilepticus. lorazepam lasts 10-20 minutes. short half life but less distribution. diazepam is 5 minutes, longer halflife but more distribution

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15
Q

valproate

A

blocks Na channels and GABA system. sedation and tremor are toxicity. nausea, weight gain, hair loss, hyperammonemia, teratogenic effects are adverse reactions. broad spectrum of activity. useful in a lot of epilepsy types, migraine prophylaxis, and bipolar

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16
Q

valproate pharm considerations

A

highly protein bound, hepatic metabolism, rapidly absorbed and metabolized, short half life, extended release preps needed. IV used in status epilepticus

17
Q

gabapentin and pregabalin

A

GABA analogs, inhibit Ca currents. used as adjunctive treatment for partial complex epilepsy, and neuropathic pain.

18
Q

gabapentin pharm considerations

A

absorption limited at amino acid transporter in intestine. limited protein binding. no metabolism, just eliminate in urine. no organ toxicity. toxicity related to sedation

19
Q

ethosuximide

A

effective against Absence Seizures ONLY! readily absorbed with minimal first pass metabolism, not protein bound. half life 40-60 hours. blocks T-type calcium current in thalamocortical circuits. nausea, sedation, irritability side effects

20
Q

topiramate

A

AMPA and Kaniate Ca channel blocker. also effective at Na and GABA channels. effective against partial onset and secondarily generalized seizures as well as Primary generalized epilepsy. effective for migraine prophylaxis

21
Q

topiramate pharm considerations

A

some carbonic anhydrase activity. toxicity: sedation, word finding. adverse rxns: mild metabolic acidosis -> tinging. modest weight loss. kidney stones. acute glaucoma rare

22
Q

levetiracetam

A

effective against partial onset and secondarily generalized seizures. some evidence of activity against primary generalized epilepsy. binds to synaptic vesicle protein 2 resulting in less neurotransmitter release. well tolerated. tox is sedation, adverse rxns are irritability, aphasia, thrombocytopenia

23
Q

lithium

A

bipolar mood stabilizer. used in cluster headaches. alters sodium transport. inhibits sodium reabsorption proximal tubule. renal clearance related to serum concentration. contraindicated in arrhythymia or dehydration. drug interactions w/ diuretics, ARB, NSAIDs. Lot of tox: low level: sedation, dizzy, thirst, urination, tremor. high: giddiness, ataxia, blurry ision, urine!

brugada syndrome and arrhythmia can be bad. ask about sudden death in fam before age 45