Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0038220 (status epilepticus)
7,272 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

There have been anecdotes of unexplained coma and death in patients after otherwise successful orthotopic lung transplantation. A patient with primary pulmonary hypertension who underwent a technically uncomplicated single orthotopic lung transplantation is described. The patient developed intractable status epilepticus 4 days after surgery in association with the presence of a markedly elevated plasma ammonium level. Despite multiple therapeutic interventions, the hyperammonemia ultimately resulted in the patient's death. Both metabolic and enzymatic studies showed that the unique physiological disturbance in this disorder results at least in part from defective in vivo conversion of waste nitrogen to urea and increased production of waste nitrogen. Although the rate of hepatic ureagenesis was therefore insufficient to prevent accumulation of ammonium, the cause was not severe liver disease. Liver histology showed widespread, microvesicular steatosis on light-microscopic examination, but only electron-microscopic examination showed severe microvesicular steatosis with severe mitochondrial injury. As in Reye's syndrome, it was unclear whether the hepatic mitochondrial injury played a role in development or if it was the result of hyperammonemia. We recommended that any patient with an unexplained alteration of mental status after solid organ transplantation be evaluated for hyperammonemia.
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PMID:Fatal hyperammonemia following orthotopic lung transplantation. 917 20

Hepatic encephalopathy represents a reversible decrease in neurological function caused by liver disease. Overall incidence of seizures in hepatic encephalopathy varies between 2% and 33%. Non-convulsive status epilepticus may be particularly common in these patients. Psychiatric disturbances manifest as agitation, personality change, delusions, etc. Aims of seizure management include treatment of basic disease, correction of precipitant factors, imaging of head, and choice of a pharmacologically safe agent. It is important to consider non-convulsive status epilepticus and rule it out by an EEG. Absolute data for safety profile of drugs in liver disease is still not clear, as changes of pharmacokinetics make choice of drugs difficult. Free drug concentrations may be higher, making plasma concentration monitoring essential in such circumstances. A single seizure may not require therapy. However when started, antiepileptic drugs are usually discontinued early. Drugs with sedative effects are best avoided because of a risk of precipitating coma. Phenytoin and gabapentin are relatively preferred drugs; however, monitoring of drug levels is desirable. Management of agitation includes physical restraint and medication. Benzodiazepines are best avoided. Haloperidol is a safer choice in the presence of liver disease. Overall management of neuropsychiatric state aims at management of underlying pathology, the resolution of which leads to improvement in the clinical symptomatology.
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PMID:Management of agitation and convulsions in hepatic encephalopathy. 1502 57

Acute, symptomatic seizures or epilepsy may complicate the course of hepatic disease. Choosing the most appropriate antiepileptic drug in this setting represents a difficult challenge, as most medications are metabolized by the liver. This article focuses on the acute and chronic treatment of seizures in patients with advanced liver disease and reviews the hepatotoxic potential of specific antiepileptic drugs. Newer antiepileptic drugs without, or with minimal, hepatic metabolism, such as levetiracetam, lacosamide, topiramate, gabapentin, and pregabalin should be used as first-line therapy. Medications undergoing extensive hepatic metabolism, such as valproic acid, phenytoin, and felbamate should be used as drugs of last resort. In special circumstances, as in patients affected by acute intermittent porphyria, exposure to most antiepileptic drugs could precipitate attacks. In this clinical scenario, bromides, levetiracetam, gabapentin, and vigabatrin constitute safe choices. For the treatment of status epilepticus, levetiracetam and lacosamide, available in intravenous preparations, are good second-line therapies after benzodiazepines fail to control seizures. Hepatotoxicity is also a rare and unexpected side effect of some antiepileptic drugs. Drugs such as valproic acid, phenytoin, and felbamate, have a well-recognized association with liver toxicity. Other antiepileptic drugs, including phenobarbital, benzodiazepines, ethosuximide, and the newer generations of antiepileptic drugs, have only rarely been linked to hepatotoxicity. Thus physicians should be mindful of the pharmacokinetic profile and the hepatotoxic potential of the different antiepileptic drugs available to treat patients affected by liver disease.
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PMID:Antiepileptic Drugs and Liver Disease. 2909 18

Hepatic encephalopathy (HE) is an extremely rare cause of focal seizures and is usually a diagnosis of exclusion when more commoner causes such as infection, autoimmune and malignancy have been discounted. The literature reports patients with generalised cerebral oedema and rarely status epilepticus, but these are often in the context of acute liver failure as opposed to chronic liver disease. Here we discuss a case of HE leading to focal neurological deficits and seizures in a 48-year-old woman with a background of chronic alcoholic liver disease. MRI scan showed extensive left-sided tempo-parietal-occipital cortical oedema and electroencephalogram showed widespread moderate HE with runs of epileptiform discharges. The treatment involves antiepileptic therapy as well as standard management of HE with laxatives, rifaximin and optimisation of nutrition.
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PMID:Hepatic encephalopathy: a rare cause of focal seizures in chronic liver disease. 3216 82