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Dr. Andrew Rynne
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Dr. Andrew Rynne

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Exp 50 years

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Article Home Adult and Senior Health Latest treatment of epilepsy

Latest treatment of epilepsy

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Main treatment options in epileptic patients include ? anti epileptic or convulsant medications, surgery, and vagus nerve stimulation. Ketogenic diet is especially effective in treating patients with child hood epilepsy and lennox- gastaut syndrome.

 

An accurate diagnosis of the type of epilepsy (not just the type of seizure, since most seizure types occur in different types of epilepsy) is also critical to choosing the best treatment.

Treatment options

  • Antiepileptic medications/ anticonvulsants
  • Epileptic surgeries
  • Vagus nerve stimulation

Antiepileptic medications

Older classic medications

  • Phenobarbitone
  • Phenytoin
  • Divalproex sodium
  • Primidone
  • Trimethadione
  • Potassium bromide

Established class of drugs

Newer antiepileptic drugs

  • Gabapentin
  • Pregabalin
  • Lamotrigine
  • Oxcarbazepine
  • Vigabatrin
  • Tiagabine
  • Levitiracetam
  • Felbamate
  • Zonisamide
  • Topiramate

Drug of choice in treatment in treatment of specific seizure type

Newer antiepileptic drugs offer no more effective treatment than the established drugs, but the newer drugs have fewer side effects and better are tolerated.

Seizure disorder

Drug of choice

2 nd line therapy

Newer drugs

Primary generalized tonic- clonic seizure

Sodium Valproate

Carbamazepine

Phenytoin

Phenobarbitone

Topiramate

Lamotrigine

Levitiracetam

Zonisamide

Partial seizures

Sodium Valproate

Carbamazepine

Phenytoin

Oxcarbazepine

Zonisamide

Gabapentin

Petit mal seizures (absence seizures)

Ethosuximide

Sodium Valproate

Lamotrigine

Levitiracetam

Topiramate

Infantile spasms, myoclonic, atonic seizures

Sodium Valproate

----

Vigabatrin

Juvenile myoclonic epilepsy

Sodium Valproate

----

Levitiracetam

Zonisamide

Topiramate

Lennox- gastaut syndrome

Lamotrigine

----

Topiramate

Felbamate

 

 

 

 

 

 

Once seizure attacks are well controlled, the drug should be continued without interruption until patients have been seizure-free or symptom free period of at least 2 yr. At that time, stopping the drug may be considered.

Causes of relapse in seizure attacks

Of patients who relapse, about 60% do so within 1 yr, and 80% within 2 yr. Patients who have a relapse when they are not taking anticonvulsants should be treated indefinitely

 

  • A seizure disorder since childhood
  • Need for > 1 drug to be seizure-free
  • Previous seizures while taking an anticonvulsant
  • Partial or myoclonic seizures       
  • Underlying static encephalopathy
  • Abnormal EEG results within the last year

Adverse effects of antiepileptic drugs

  • Common neurological side effects- blurry or double vision, fatigue, sleepiness, unsteadiness, short term memory loss, dizziness, and disorientation
  • Other side effects-  nausea, vomiting, skin rashes, reduced blood counts, fatty liver, and hair loss

Epileptic surgery

70- 75% of epileptic patients can be managed by proper antiepileptic medications

The remaining 20- 25% patients come under medically intractable epilepsy, which need surgical intervention.

 

Brain surgery in epilepsy

Resection or resective surgery

  • In this type, the surgeon removes the area of the brain that causes the patient's seizures.
  • The most common example of this type of surgery is the temporal lobectomy, in which part of the temporal lobe of the brain is removed.
  • Resective surgeries include lesionectomy, amygdalo hippocampectomy with or without temporal lobe resection, and multilobar resection.

Disconnective epileptic surgeries

  • It’s less common type of epilepsy surgery that interrupts nerve pathways that allow seizures to spread.
  • Non resective surgeries include multiple subplial transection, corpus callosotomy and vagus nerve stimulation
  • Disconnection procedures are generally thought of as providing relief, but not a cure.

Vagus nerve stimulation

  • Its new treatment which involves electrical stimulation of  left vagus nerve
  • This treatment requires minor surgery to implant a stimulator, which is about the size of a silver dollar.
  • The stimulator is placed under the skin in the upper chest, like a pacemaker.
  • Vagus nerve stimulation decreases seizure frequency by half more than in 40%-50% of patients, but rarely eliminates all seizures.
  • Almost all patients need to continue taking medications after the stimulator has been placed, although many people can take fewer medicines.

Ketogenic diet

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