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Query: UMLS:C0012833 (
dizziness
)
9,689
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Tiagabine
is a new antiepileptic drug which acts by a novel mechanism, inhibiting the reuptake of the inhibitory neurotransmitter gamma-aminobutyric acid (GABA) into neurons and glia. A double-blind, placebo-controlled, crossover trial was undertaken, based upon a response-dependent design. Ninety-four patients with complex partial seizures with or without secondary generalised tonic-clonic seizures were recruited into an open screening phase and tiagabine was added to their existing drug therapy in doses titrated to reduce seizure frequency by > or = 25% or to the limit of tolerance. Forty-six responders were subsequently randomised to a double-blind crossover trial in which tiagabine was compared with placebo. Forty-two patients completed the trial. A significant reduction in the frequency of complex partial and secondary generalised tonic clonic seizures was seen. Twenty-six percent had a reduction of > or = 50% in the frequency of their complex partial seizures, and of the 27 patients who also had secondary generalised tonic clonic seizures, 63% experienced a reduction of > or = 50%. No interactions with baseline antiepileptic drugs were detected and no serious adverse reactions occurred. The commonest adverse events were tiredness,
dizziness
and headache. We conclude that tiagabine has promising antiepileptic effects. Further trials are underway.
...
PMID:Adjunctive treatment of partial seizures with tiagabine: a placebo-controlled trial. 764 74
Tiagabine
(
TGB
) hydrochloride is a potential new antiepileptic drug (AED) undergoing clinical development. Experience in humans amounts to 1,810 patient-years of exposure.
TGB
was found to be tolerated in an integrated safety analysis of five double-blind, add-on therapy trials involving approximately 1,000 patients with epilepsy with difficult-to-control seizures with existing AEDs. Discontinuation resulting from adverse events were infrequent, occurring in 15% of patients receiving
TGB
compared to 5% receiving placebo. The most frequently reported adverse event was
dizziness
, which was usually transient and did not require medical intervention. Adverse events that were statistically significantly more common with
TGB
than placebo were
dizziness
, asthenia, nervousness, tremor, diarrhea, and depression (not major depression). Adverse events were usually mild to moderate in severity and transient, and most were associated with dose titration. The incidence, type, and severity of adverse events in long-term studies were comparable with those in short-term studies. Serious adverse events were uncommon and no idiosyncratic events were reported.
...
PMID:Tiagabine: the safety landscape. 859 87
Tiagabine
is a gamma-aminobutyric acid (GABA) uptake inhibitor which is structurally related to nipecotic acid but has an improved ability to cross the blood-brain barrier. Clinical trials have shown that tiagabine is effective as add-on therapy in the management of patients with refractory partial epilepsy. In short term studies of this indication, tiagabine < or = 64 mg/day for 7 to 12 weeks reduced the complex partial and simple partial seizure frequency by > or = 50% in 8 to 31 and 28.2 to 37% of patients, respectively.
Tiagabine
appeared to produce a sustained reduction in seizure frequency in studies of up to 12 months' duration. Data from preliminary studies are currently insufficient to confirm the usefulness of tiagabine when used as monotherapy or in the treatment of children with epilepsy. Further studies are, therefore, necessary to more fully elucidate the efficacy of the drug in these settings. Adverse events associated with tiagabine are primarily CNS-related and include
dizziness
, asthenia, nonspecific nervousness and tremor. Skin rash or psychosis occurred with similar frequencies among tiagabine- and placebo-treated patients. With long term administration (> or = 1 year for many patients), the profile and incidence of adverse events was similar to that for short term therapy.
Tiagabine
does not appear to affect the hepatic metabolism of other drugs such as carbamazepine and phenytoin. Possible disadvantages of tiagabine include its short plasma elimination half-life, necessitating 2 to 4 times daily administration, and its inducible hepatic metabolism. Thus, tiagabine is a new antiepileptic agent with a novel mechanism of action, which has demonstrated efficacy in the adjunctive treatment of patients with refractory partial epilepsy. Further investigation of the efficacy of tiagabine is expected to provide a clearer definition of its place in the treatment of epilepsy and its relative merits in relation to other antiepileptic drugs.
...
PMID:Tiagabine. A review of its pharmacodynamic and pharmacokinetic properties and therapeutic potential in the management of epilepsy. 953 May 48
In a multicentre, double-blind, parallel-group, placebo-controlled trial, a three-times daily regimen of tiagabine was evaluated as add-on therapy in 154 adult patients with refractory partial seizures. A total of 77 patients were randomised to treatment in each arm.
Tiagabine
HCl was titrated from an initial dose of 12-30 mg/day over 4 weeks. During the 12-week fixed-dose period, there was a significant reduction in the median 4-weekly seizure rate for all partial seizures and simple partial seizures (P < 0.05 in each case). Furthermore, the proportion of patients with a reduction of 50% or more in all partial seizures was higher in the tiagabine group than in the placebo group (14 versus 6%), though the difference did not achieve statistical significance. The difference with respect to simple partial seizures was significant (21 versus 6%, P < 0.01). The percentage of patients achieving an increase of at least 50% in the proportion of days free of all partial seizures was significantly greater in the tiagabine group compared to placebo (14 versus 4%, P<0.01).
Tiagabine
did not appear to influence the plasma concentrations of other concomitant antiepileptic drugs and was generally well tolerated, with most drug-related adverse events being mild or moderate in severity. The most common adverse events were
dizziness
, asthenia, headache and somnolence. Adverse event incidence was similar between tiagabine and placebo groups, except for
dizziness
which was more common with tiagabine (29 versus 10%, P < 0.01).
Tiagabine
had no significant effects on laboratory tests or vital signs. The present study shows that tiagabine, at a dose of 10 mg administered three-times daily, which is at the lower end of the usual recommended dose range (30-50 mg/day, tiagabine base), is generally well tolerated and demonstrates efficacy for the treatment of refractory partial seizures.
...
PMID:A double-blind, placebo-controlled trial of tiagabine given three-times daily as add-on therapy for refractory partial seizures. Northern European Tiagabine Study Group. 955 42
This study was conducted to investigate the effects on the pharmacokinetics of tiagabine at steady state when coadministered with therapeutic doses of erythromycin.
Tiagabine
doses of 4 mg twice daily and erythromycin doses of 500 mg twice daily were administered for 4 days in an open-label, crossover, two-period interaction trial in 13 healthy volunteers. No statistically significant differences in maximum plasma concentration (Cmax), area under the concentration-time curve (AUC tau), or half-life (t1/2) of tiagabine were observed when tiagabine was administered alone or in combination with erythromycin. A statistically significant treatment effect was observed for time to maximum concentration (tmax; 0.72 after tiagabine alone versus 0.56 hours after administration with erythromycin). No statistically significant differences were seen between men and women except in tmax and t1/2; these differences were thought to be of no clinical significance. The decrease in tmax seen in women in this study is interpreted as a differential effect of erythromycin on gastric emptying of females and not as an interaction between tiagabine and erythromycin. No changes in laboratory parameters or vital signs were attributable to trial medication. The most common treatment-emergent adverse events that were possibly related to trial medication were central nervous system effects (e.g., headache,
dizziness
); all adverse events were transient, the majority were rated mild in severity, and did not require additional action. Coadministration of erythromycin in healthy subjects does not significantly affect the pharmacokinetics of tiagabine at the doses tested.
...
PMID:Lack of pharmacokinetic interaction between tiagabine and erythromycin. 982 87
Tiagabine
exerts its antiepileptic drug (AED) activity by selectively inhibiting the uptake of gamma-aminobutyric acid (GABA) onto the transporter molecules, and thus, increasing extracellular concentrations of GABA in the brain. The absorption and elimination of tiagabine follow linear pharmacokinetics.
Tiagabine
is metabolized by hepatic cytochrome P450 enzymes and enzyme-inducing AEDs increase tiagabine clearance by 50-65%.
Tiagabine
has shown no clinically important interactions with other drugs, including oral contraceptives. In the perforant pathway stimulation model of status epilepticus, tiagabine reduced the seizure number and severity, and also prevented the loss of pyramidal cells in the hippocampus as well as alleviated impairment of the spatial memory impairment associated with hippocampal damage.
Tiagabine
has both antiepileptogenic and anticonvulsant effects in the kindling model of epilepsy. Based on the data from the short- and long-term add-on studies, tiagabine is effective adjunctive therapy for all partial seizure types in adolescents and adults. Conversion to tiagabine monotherapy has been also possible in substantial amount of patients with partial seizures in three trials.
Tiagabine
is generally well-tolerated. The most common adverse events in controlled studies involve the central nervous system; for example,
dizziness
, asthenia, nervousness, tremor, depressed mood and emotional lability. Special safety analyses with formal neuropsychological testing suggest that tiagabine does not adversely affect cognition or mood.
Tiagabine
represents an important new therapeutic option for patients with treatment-refractory partial seizures. The role of tiagabine in the management of partial epilepsy of patients with intellectual disability is especially emphasized since tiagabine has a low side-effect profile in the cognitive area.
...
PMID:Tiagabine: a new therapeutic option for people with intellectual disability and partial epilepsy. 1003 Apr 35
Tiagabine
(
TGB
) is a recently approved antiepileptic drug (AED) that inhibits y-aminobutyric acid (GABA) reuptake into neurons and glia, a mechanism of action that is specific and unique among the AEDs.
TGB
is potent and has linear and predictable pharmacokinetics. It has no clinically relevant effects on hepatic metabolism or serum concentrations of other AEDs, effects on laboratory values, or interactions with common non-AEDs.
TGB
is effective as add-on therapy for partial seizures in patients with medically refractory epilepsy in doses ranging from 30 to 56 mg daily. Conversion to
TGB
monotherapy can be achieved in patients with medically refractory epilepsy, although additional controlled studies are needed to confirm the efficacy of
TGB
as monotherapy and to establish the effective dosage range. In controlled studies, the most common adverse events of
TGB
are
dizziness
, asthenia, somnolence, accidental injury, infection, headache, nausea, and nervousness. These are usually mild to moderate in severity and almost always resolve without medical intervention.
...
PMID:Tiagabine. 1053 Jun 90
Tiagabine
(
TGB
), a recently approved antiepileptic drug (AED), has a specific mechanism of action that is unique among AEDs. A potent AED with linear, predictable pharmacokineties, it inhibits gamma-aminobutyric acid (GABA) reuptake into neurons and glia.
Tiagabine
does not have any clinically relevant effects on hepatic metabolism or on serum concentrations of other AEDs, nor does it interact with commonly used non-AEDs. The most common side effects of
TGB
in controlled studies are
dizziness
, asthenia, somnolence, accidental injury, infection, headache, nausea, and nervousness. These events are usually mild to moderate in severity and generally do not require medical intervention. At dosages of 30-56 mg daily,
TGB
is an effective add-on treatment for partial seizures. Although patients who have medically refractory epilepsy can be converted to
TGB
monotherapy, more controlled studies are necessary to confirm the efficacy of
TGB
as monotherapy and to determine the effective dosage range.
...
PMID:A review of the antiepileptic drug tiagabine. 1062 90
Tiagabine
is a new antiepileptic drug which acts by blocking neuronal and glial GABA uptake and it is indicated in the treatment of partial epilepsies. Its pharmacokinetics is lineal, being extensively metabolized in the liver by means of CYP3A4 isoenzyme. Plasma elimination half life ranges between 5-8 hours in healthy volunteers, being markedly reduced when the drug is administered concomitantly with enzyme-inducing antinconvulsants.
Tiagabine
does not induce nor inhibit hepatic enzymes and, consequently, it does not modify the kinetics of simultaneously prescribed antiepileptic drugs. No relevant kinetic differences have been observed between adults and elderly subjects. Renal impairment does not alter the pharmacokinetic profile of tiagabine; hepatic disease, however, significantly reduces tiagabine elimination and lower daily doses of the drug are necessary in these patients. Although tiagabine elimination half life is short, it has been ascertained that therapeutic efficacy is similar when administered in 2 or 4 divided doses.
Tiagabine
is usually well tolerated; its most frequent side effects include
dizziness
, asthenia, nervousness, tremor, diarrhea and depressed mood.
...
PMID:[Clinical implications of pharmacology and pharmacokinetics of tiagabine]. 1071 5
Tiagabine
, a specific gamma-aminobutyric acid-uptake inhibitor, has been shown to be reasonably well tolerated and efficacious as adjunctive treatment for partial seizures in adults and is now being investigated in children. This 4-month, single-blind study evaluated the tolerability, safety and preliminary efficacy of ascending doses (0.25-1.5 mg/kg/day) of tiagabine add-on therapy in 52 children over the age of 2 years with different syndromes of refractory epilepsy. Adverse events, mostly mild to moderate, were reported by 39% of children during the single-blind placebo period and by 83% of children during tiagabine treatment. The events predominantly affected the nervous system with asthenia (19%), nervousness (19%),
dizziness
(17%) and somnolence (17%) being the most common. Only three children (6%) withdrew because of adverse events.
Tiagabine
appeared to reduce seizures more in localisation-related epilepsy syndromes than in generalised epilepsy syndromes. Twenty-three patients with localisation-related epilepsy syndromes were included and 17 of these patients entered the fourth dosing period. The 17 patients had a median reduction of seizure rate in the fourth month of treatment of 33% compared with baseline. In comparison, 13 of 22 children with seven different generalised epilepsy syndromes entered the fourth dosing period with a median change of seizure rate of 0%. Two patients experienced single episodes of status epilepticus during treatment; both cases resolved.
Tiagabine
showed efficacy mainly in localisation-related syndromes and was well tolerated by most children in a group of very refractory patients and warrants further study in children with epilepsy.
...
PMID:Tiagabine adjunctive therapy in children with refractory epilepsy: a single-blind dose escalating study. 1107 88
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