Epilepsy as a drug target Flashcards

1
Q

What is an epileptic seizure

A

a sudden synchronous discharge of cerebral neurons causing symptoms or signs that are apparent either to the patient or the observer

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2
Q

What is epilepsy

A

ongoing susceptibility to recurrent epileptic seizures

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3
Q

How are seizures classified

A

how much of the brain is firing when it shouldn’t

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4
Q

What types of seizures are classified as generalized seizures

A
  • tonic clonic
  • absence
  • myoclonic
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5
Q

What types of seizures are classified as focal

A
  • aura
  • motor
  • simple vs complex
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6
Q

Sodium valproate is a common antiepileptic drug - what form of epilepsy is it used for and what is its mechanism of action

A

generalised tonic clonic seizures
increases GABA and blocks central Na+ channels

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7
Q

Carbamazepine is a common antiepileptic drug - what form of epilepsy is it used for and what is its mechanism of action

A

focal seizures
inhibits neuronal sodium channels

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8
Q

pheytoin is a common antiepileptic drug - what form of epilepsy is it used for and what is its mechanism of action

A

status epilepticus
generalised tonic clonic seizures

blocks sodium channels at inactive site

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9
Q

Pregabalin/gabapentin is a common antiepileptic drug - what form of epilepsy is it used for and what is its mechanism of action

A

focal seizures
inhibits voltage gated calcium channels

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10
Q

What is the difference between seizures and syncopes

A

Seizure: -

  • sleep deprivation
  • post-ictal confusion/prolonged recovery
  • tongue biting
  • cyanosis

Syncope:

  • pain, heat
  • rapid recovery
  • no tongue biting
  • pallor
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11
Q

What is status epilepticus

A

continuous seizure activity which has failed to self terminate leading to risk of neurological damage (>5mins)

Medical emergency

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12
Q

what is status epilepticus

A
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13
Q

What are the key characteristics of a Generalised tonic-clonic seizure

A
  • tonic phase (10-20s) muscles contracted, ictal cry, respiratory impairment
  • clonic phase (1min) - violent shaking and jerking
  • postictal phase (1-2 hours) - confusion, unresponsiveness, muscle flaccidity
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