Epilepsy drugs Flashcards
1
Q
Chemical categories
A
- Barbiturates
- Phenobarbital
- Pentobarbital
- Primidone - Benzodiazepines
- Diazepam, Midazolam
- Clonazepam
- Carbamazepin - Others:
- Phenytoin
- Valproic acid
- Gabapentin
- Felbamate
- Topiramate
- Lamotrigine
- Bromide salts
- Vigabatrin
2
Q
Drugs for treatment of Status Epilepticus
A
- Diazepam
- Phenobarbital (Pentobarbital)
- Propofol
3
Q
Drugs for prevention of seizures
A
- Phenobarbital (Luminal, Sevenal)
- Phenytoin
- Valproic acid
- Bromide salts
- Clonadepam
- Clorazepate
- Felbamate
- Gabapentin
- Levetiracetam
- Primidone
- Topiramate
- Vigabatrin
4
Q
Effects of Phenobarbital
A
- Sedation
- Drowsiness
- Ataxia
- Polyphagia, polyuria,
5
Q
Which is the drug of choice for controlling status epilepticus for dogs and cats, and the anticonvulsant of choice of horses?
A
Diazepam, Midazolam
6
Q
Types and effects of benzidiazepines
A
- Clonazepam:
•Better oral absorption and decr. tolerance development
•Diarrhoea can develop, increase dosage from s.i.d. → t.i.d. or a period of several days to counteract - Clorazepate
- Carbamazepine
•Similar characteristics to Phenytoin but with less side effects.
•Good for psychomotor epilepsy.
7
Q
Administration of Primidone
A
-Do not adm. w. barbiturates!
8
Q
Administration of Bromide salts (Na/K)
A
Alone or with phenobarbital
9
Q
Effects of Bromide salts (Na/K)
A
- Long ½ life
- Side effects: sedations, pruritic (itchy) skin lesions, polydipsia, polyuria, ataxia, stupor (lack of cognitive function)
10
Q
Effects of Phenytoin
A
- Cardiac anti-dysrhythmic activity
- Anticonvulsant
- Absorption and metabolism variable
- Short elimination ½ life in dog (difficult to achieve therapeutic levels), extremely long in cats (toxicity!)
11
Q
Effects of other antiepileptic drugs:
- Na Valproate
- Gabapentin
- Felbamate
A
1. Na Valproate •Excellent oral absorption in dogs but short ½ life. •Used in patients where other drugs have failed, mainly in combination 2. Gabapentin • Food has no effect on absorption. • Side effects uncommon, non-sedating. • Mainly used in combination. 3. Felbamate • Well tolerated in dogs (not humans)
12
Q
Contraindicated drugs for epileptics
A
•Tranquilizers •Others drugs capable of inducing seizures: → Morphine/opioid derivatives → Ketamine → Alpha 2 agonists → Methylxanthines → Metoclopramide → Fluorinated quinolones → Chloramphenicol