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Query: UMLS:C0036572 (
seizures
)
80,221
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The therapeutics results with the use of different drugs (diazepam, nitrazepam, clonazepam, diphenylhydantoin, barbiturates--phenobarbital and primidone--,
sodium
dipropylacetate and ACTH) in twenty-nine patients with Lennox--Gastaut syndrome are carefully analysed. The effect of each drug on
seizures
(tonic, tonic-clonic, clonic, myoclonic or myoclonic-atonic, atonic and atypical absences) during the first month of each treatment is discussed. The "specific" use of each drug on the various forms of epileptic
seizures
is determined and the possibility of crisis control with reduction of the drugs dosage is verified.
...
PMID:[Effect of drugs on electroclinical types of epileptic seizures in Lennox-Gastaut syndrome]. 19 7
Intracerebroventricular administration of 10--20 microgram of steroid-O-sulfates induced hypermotility, agitation, salivation, EEG abnormalities, stereotypies, wet dog shakes and
seizures
. Equivalent effects resulted from 30--200 microgram morphine sulfate (H2SO4 salt), 50 microgram EGTA or 300--400 microgram of
sodium
sulfate or phosphate, but not chloride, nitrate or acetate. Non-steroid sulfates, steroid glucuronides and steroid phosphates were inactive. Naloxone, previously found to antagonize the excitatory effects of androsterone sulfate, failed to antagonize those of cortisol sulfate,
sodium
sulfate or EGTA. These findings suggest a role for extracellular calcium ions and for sulfate derived from circulating steroids in central responses to opiates.
...
PMID:Opiate-like excitatory effects of steroid sulfates and calcium-complexing agents given cerebroventricularly. 21 60
In idiopathic or generalized epilepsy, serum glucose and cholesterol concentrations tend to be low, especially just before the
seizure
. Glucose tolerance curves are abnormal and variable. The electrolyte balance is disturbed, and epileptics tend to go readily into alkalosis. Serum [
Na+
] is usually unaffected, but [K+] is normal to low between attacks and increases during and after the
seizure
. Serum [Cl-] is usually high just before the
seizure
. Epileptics are generally mildly hypocalcemic, especially in the period before the
seizure
. Serum urea and nonprotein nitrogen values are low between paroxysms but increase after the
seizure
. Serum protein concentration is usually normal. Stress, which releases epinephrine and corticotropin, results in high serum citrate concentration, which probably contributes to decreased serum [Ca2+] just before a
seizure
. In the healthy individual, any increase in serum citrate is accompanied by increasing [Ca2+]. In the rabbit, convulsions can be induced with corticotropin, a result of increased serum citrate concentration coupled with a decrease in [Ca2+]. The net result is severe hypo-ionic-calcemia. A similar phenomenon has been reported in a few humans. Administration of insulin causes serum citrate concentrations to decrease. Apparently, the dynamic system that controls glucose and lipid metabolism, and thus electrolyte balance, through the hormones epinephrine, corticotropin, insulin, glucagon, calcitonin, and parathormone, is abnormal in the epileptic.
...
PMID:Clinical biochemistry of epilepsy. I. Nature of the disease and a review of the chemical findings in epilepsy. 22 Nov 36
We propose than an alarm mechanism is operative in animals, designed to regulate neuromuscular irritability by regulating [Ca2+]. Epinephrine or corticotropin (ACTH), injected intramuscularly into animals, causes a hypercitricemia, resulting in decreased [Ca2+]. This increases muscular excitability to facilitate escape. To avoid over reaction, [Cl-] is shifted into the plasma without a concomitant shift of
Na+
, thus generating an acidosis and an increase in ionization of Ca. Plasma pH, pCO2, total CO2, and [K+] decrease, and [Mg2+] increases. The acidosis, decrease in K+, and increase in [Mg2+] serve to counteract the effect of the decrease in [Ca2+], to protect against tetany. In the rabbit the hypercitricemia observed upon ACTH administration is accompained by a severe hypocalcemia and drop in blood pressure, resluting in tetanic convulsions. This seems to indicate calcitonin release, independent of the hypercitricemia. Thyroidectomized rabbits show only mild hypocalcemia when given ACTH, but develop a severe acidosis and typical grand mal epileptiform
seizures
. Administration of ACTH and then calcitonin to the goat, an animal resistant to the effects of ACTH alone, simulates the effect observed in the rabbit with respect to changes in blood components and blood pressure. Changes in the blood in the goat and rabbit resemble those in humans before an epileptic seizure. alpha-Melanotropin, containing a portion of the ACTH sequence, reacts in a manner similar to ACTH but more rapidly.
...
PMID:Clinical biochemistry of epilepsy. II. Observations on two types of epileptiform convulsions induced in rabbits with corticotropin. 22 Nov 37
The pharmacology of Avena sativa has been investigated in laboratory animals following a report that tincture of Avena sativa reduced the craying for cigarettes in man. The tincture, evaporated to dryness, craving for cigarettes in man. The tincture, evaporated to dryness, re-constituted in an equal volume of water and administered by stomach tube or intraperitoneal injection, antagonized the antinociceptive effect of morphine in two separate test (hot-plate and tail flick). Compared with animals made depedent on morphine alone, mice pretreated with repeated injections of morphine plus extract passed a smaller number of stools and tended to jump less after administration of nalorphine. The pressor response to intravenously administered nicotine in urethane-anaesthetized rats was also antagonized by prior administration of Avena sativa. However, the aqueous extract prepared from the tincture did not affect the
seizure
threshold to bemegride or nicotine or the sleeping time induced by barbitone
sodium
.
...
PMID:The pharmacology of Avena sativa. 23 83
Dantrolene sodium or dantrolene1 is 1([5-(nitrophenyl)furfurylidend] amino) hydantoin
sodium
hydrate. It is indicated for use in chronic disorders characterised by skeletal muscle spasticity, such as spinal cord injury, stroke, cerebral palsy and multiple sclerosis. Dantrolene is believed to act directly on the contractile mechanism of skeletal muscle to decrease the force of contraction in the absence of any demonstrated effects on neural pathways, on the neuromuscular junction, or on the excitable properties of the muscle fibre membranes. Controlled trials have demonstrated that dantrolene is superior to placebo in adults or children with spasticity from various causes, as evidenced by clinical assessments of disability and daily activities, and by muscle and reflex responses to mechanical and electrical stimulation. It is somewhat less effective in patients with multiple sclerosis than in those with spasticity from other causes. There has been a general clinical impression in controlled trials that dantrolene caused less sedation than would have been expected from therapeutically comparable doses of diazepam. In 2 controlled trials, there was no significant difference between dantrolene and diazepam in terms of reductions in spasticity, clonus, and hyperreflexia, but side-effects such as drowsiness and inco-ordination occurred significantly more frequently on diazepam. Long-term studies have indicated continuing benefit for patients taking dantrolene, though the incidence of side-effects has often been high and there has been a suggestion of exacerbation of
seizures
in children with cerebral palsy. Dantrolene may be of value in the medical treatment of spasm of the external urethral sphincter due to neurological and non-neurological disease, and animal studies suggest a potential use in the management of malignant hyperpyrexia. Chemical evidence of liver dysfunction may occur in 0.7 to 1% of patients on long-term treatment with dantrolene, with symptomatic hepatitis in 0.35 to 0.5% and fatal hepatitis in 0.1 to 0.2%. The drug commonly causes transient drowsiness, dizziness, weakness, general malaise, fatigue and diarrhoea at the start of therapy. Muscle weakness may be the principal limiting side-effect in ambulant patients, particularly in those with multiple sclerosis, and therapy could be hazardous in patients with pre-existing bulbar or respiratory weakness. The dosage of dantrolene has been fixed in most controlled trials, though long-term studies have indicated the need for individualisation of dosage. The initial dose is usually 25mg once daily, increasing to 25mg two, three or four times daily, and then by increments of 25mg up to as high as 100mg two, three or four times daily. The lowest dose compatible with optimal response is recommended.
...
PMID:Dantrolene sodium: a review of its pharmacological properties and therapeutic efficacy in spasticity. 31 89
1. A precise and rapid gas chromatographic method for the measurement of plasma
sodium
valproate concentrations is presented. 2. The extraction is a single step procedure, and is reproducible and linear throughout the concentration range encountered. 3. Clinical evaluation of the drug is presented in eighteen epileptics on the basis of the percentage of days on which subjects had
seizures
before and after
sodium
valproate therapy. 4. A tentative therapeutic range for
sodium
valproate is presented on the basis of plasma levels and therapeutic effect.
...
PMID:Gas chromatographic measurement of plasma levels of sodium valproate: tentative therapeutic range of a new anticonvulsant in the treatment of refractory epileptics. 34 72
A decrease in brain GABA concentration has been implied as the cause of convulsions induced by hyperbaric oxygen (HOP). We therefore examined the influence of
sodium
valproate, an anticonvulsant and GABA transaminase inhibitor on HOP-induced convulsions in rats. The mean latency of occurrence of the first electrical discharge in the ECoG and the appearance of the first clinical
seizure
in awake chronically implanted rats was unchanged by administration of
sodium
valproate prior to HOP exposure. We conclude that either the
sodium
valproate inhibition of GABA removal is insufficient to compensate for HOP inhibition of its production, or else that GABA concentration changes are not causally related to HOP-induced
seizures
.
...
PMID:Influence of a GABA transaminase inhibitor on central nervous system oxygen toxicity. 35 31
Six patients suffering from status epilepticus were refractory to parenteral treatment with either diazepam, amobarbital or both, and were given
sodium
valproate 200 to 800 mg every 6 hours. The drug was administered rectally as 200 mg lipid-based suppositories, thereby avoiding impaired absorption, which occurs in the presence of paralytic ileus. Plasma levels of
sodium
valproate in all patients reached the therapeutic range within 36 hours of starting therapy.
Seizures
were totally controlled in five patients and a 75 percent reduction was noted in the sixth. In two patients, the route of administration was changed from rectal to an equivalent oral dose with continuing control of
seizures
and minimal change in plasma levels, suggesting that bioavailability is similar for the two forms of the drug. The rectal route of administration was effective in achieving systemic absorption of
sodium
valproate in the treatment of status epilepticus.
...
PMID:Rectal administration of sodium valproate in status epilepticus. 35 13
A crossover comparative study of valproate
sodium
and clonazepam in the treatment of 32 adult epileptic patients receiving multiple drug therapy is described. Serum concentrations of other anticonvulsant drugs were unchanged by the addition of clonazepam. However, patients receiving high doses of other anticonvulsant drugs had lower serum concentrations of clonazepam (p less than .01). With valproate
sodium
, phenobarbital concentrations increased (P less than .05) in patients receiving phenobarbital but not significantly in patients receiving primidone. Phenytoin concentrations were reduced (P less than .05) during treatment with valproate
sodium
. Both drugs significantly reduced the frequency of minor
seizures
, with valproate
sodium
having the greater effect. However, it is important to monitor serum concentrations of other anticonvulsant drugs during treatment with valproate
sodium
since changes in these may influence
seizure
control or cause side effects.
...
PMID:Comparative trial of valproate sodium and clonazepam in chronic epilepsy. 37 83
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