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Query: UMLS:C0040822 (
tremor
)
18,428
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
This is the 2-year interim report of results from a multicenter, open-label study evaluating the long-term efficacy and safety of gabapentin (Neurontin) as add-on therapy in patients with refractory partial seizures who had had a therapeutic response to gabapentin in a preceding 12-week double-blind trial or 12-week open-label extension. A total of 240 patients continued to receive gabapentin as add-on therapy at dosages of 600-2400 mg/day for an average of 342 days (range 10-784 days). Efficacy analyses compared seizure frequency during consecutive 12-week treatment periods with seizure frequency during the 12-week baseline. During the nine treatment periods evaluated, the percent of patients with a 50% or greater reduction in seizure frequency ranged from 35% to 71%, and the median percent change in seizure frequency ranged from -33% to -60%. At the time of data cutoff, 30% of patients had withdrawn from the study due to lack of efficacy, and 4% due to adverse events. In 225 patient-years of gabapentin treatment in this study, CNS adverse events reported by more than 10% of patients were nystagmus, somnolence,
diplopia
,
tremor
, ataxia, and dizziness. No consistent changes in clinical laboratory values were associated with gabapentin. Gabapentin as add-on therapy at dosages up to 2400 mg/day is safe during long-term treatment in patients with refractory partial seizures. Subgroup analyses of patients who remained in the study over the long term confirmed that gabapentin maintained efficacy for up to 2 years.
...
PMID:The long-term safety and efficacy of gabapentin (Neurontin) as add-on therapy in drug-resistant partial epilepsy. The US Gabapentin Study Group. 808 58
Lamotrigine (LTG) inhibits repetitive high frequency firing in depolarised neurones by selectively prolonging slow inactivation of the sodium channel, thereby suppressing the release of excitatory amino acids. It has been shown to be effective in 11 pivotal double-blind add-on trials in patients with refractory partial seizures with or without secondary generalisation. Subsequent anecdotal data support its efficacy for typical and atypical absences, myoclonic jerks, tonic or clonic seizures, Lennox-Gastaut syndrome and infantile spasms. Most recently LTG has been compared with carbamazepine and phenytoin in double-blind trials in patients with newly diagnosed partial and primary and secondary generalised tonic-clonic seizures. At the doses used, its efficacy was similar to the older agents for all seizure types, but LTG was better tolerated than both of the older agents. The commonest side-effects with LTG include headache, nausea,
diplopia
, dizziness, ataxia and
tremor
. Rash occurs in fewer than 5% patients. Its incidence can be reduced by starting treatment with a low dose, particularly in patients receiving concomitant sodium valproate which inhibits LTG metabolism. Enzyme inducers, such as carbamazepine, phenytoin and phenobarbital, accelerate its elimination, but LTG itself has no effect on hepatic metabolic processes. A pharmacodynamic interaction with carbamazepine necessitates a dosage reduction in some patients when LTG is introduced. LTG is a new antiepileptic agent with a long elimination half-life, a broad spectrum of activity, and a wide therapeutic ratio.
...
PMID:Lamotrigine--an update. 895 Dec 13
Phenobarbital (phenobarbitone) and phenytoin are the most useful anticonvulsants in neonates because adverse effects are most readily reversed when these drugs are used. Most anticonvulsants are very rarely associated with haematological adverse effects. Platelet function is particularly vulnerable to valproic acid (sodium valproate) therapy. Barbiturates and phenytoin can precipitate metabolic bone disease. Although very infrequent, lymphadenopathy is most common with phenytoin, and lupus-like illnesses with ethosuximide. Valproic acid may precipitate underlying metabolic disorders. Nephrolithiasis can occur with topiramate. Liver disease is most likely with felbamate or valproic acid, but can occur with other anticonvulsants. Valproic acid and ethosuximide are the main precipitants of gastrointestinal symptomatology; while valproic acid and vigabatrin are frequently associated with excessive bodyweight gain. Rash is most likely to occur with barbiturates, but there is a high risk of this adverse effect if large doses of lamotrigine are given with valproic acid. Adverse cosmetic effects are most likely with phenytoin, but valproic acid may cause alopecia. All anticonvulsants may cause unwanted neurological effects: when they occur,
diplopia
is usually precipitated by carbamazepine;
tremor
by valproic acid; and other motor disturbances are probably most common with phenytoin. Most anticonvulsants can cause drowsiness. Phenobarbital leads anticonvulsants as a cause of behavioural difficulties. Effects of anticonvulsants on cognitive function are difficult to assess, but subtle changes have been reported for all anticonvulsants in use up to the 1980s. Compared with other anticonvulsant drugs, phenytoin and felbamate are more often discontinued as a result of unwanted effects.
...
PMID:A comparative review of the adverse effects of anticonvulsants in children with epilepsy. 896 93
It is estimated that 10-20% of patients with multiple sclerosis (MS) have a chronic progressive (CP) course characterized by an insidious of neurological deficits followed by steady progression of disability in the absence of symptomatic remission. No therapeutic modality has shown specific efficacy in the treatment of patients with CP MS and there are no data to indicate that any pharmacologic or other modality alters the clinical course of CP MS. Treatment with picotesla electromagnetic fields (EMFs) is a highly effective modality for the symptomatic management of MS including the chronic progressive form. In addition, this treatment also appears to alter the natural course of the disease in CP patients. A 36 year-old man experienced, at the age of 31, insidious weakness in the legs and several months later developed difficulties with balance with ataxia of gait. His gait abnormality progressed slowly over the following years and at the age of 35 he was severely disabled with spastic paraparesis and ataxia using a rolling walker for ambulation and a scooter for longer distances. In particular, his disability had progressed rapidly over the six months preceding the initiation of treatment with EMFs. He as classified have CP MS and his prognosis was considered extremely unfavorable due to the degree of cerebellar and pyramidal tract involvement and the rapid course of deterioration. In July 1995 the patient began experimental treatment with EMFs. While receiving three treatment sessions a week over 12 months he experienced improvement in cerebellar functions such as gait, balance and
tremor
as well as bowel and bladder functions, mood, sleep and cognitive function and resolution of
diplopia
, blurring of vision, dysarthria, paresthesias in the hands, and fatigue. Most remarkably, there was no further progression of the disease during the course of magnetic therapy. This case illustrated that treatment with EMFs, in addition to producing symptomatic improvement, also reverses the clinical course of CP MS.
...
PMID:Treatment with electromagnetic field alters the clinical course of chronic progressive multiple sclerosis--a case report. 900 66
Three hundred and forty seven patients with epilepsy from 54 centres across Europe not fully controlled with sodium valproate (VPA, n = 117), carbamazepine (CBZ, n = 129), phenytoin (PHT, n = 92) or phenobarbital (PB, n = 9) monotherapy were recruited into a lamotrigine (LTG) substitution study. If 50% or more seizure reduction occurred (responders) on addition of LTG, an attempt was made to withdraw the original antiepileptic drug (AED). If successful, this was followed by a 12 week period of LTG monotherapy. Overall, 73% patients completed the add-on phase (47% responders), 41% attempted AED withdrawal and 23% achieved LTG monotherapy. In the 60 patients (17%) completing the trial by remaining on LTG monotherapy, median monthly seizure frequency was reduced from 6 during baseline to 1.7. Sixteen percent of patients were withdrawn due to adverse effects, mostly during the add-on phase. Dizziness and
diplopia
occurred most frequently in the CBZ group, nervousness and ataxia in the PHT group, and rash and
tremor
in the VPA group. Slower LTG dose escalation resulted in fewer withdrawals due to rash in the VPA-treated patients (38% to 8%, P < 0.01). The responder rate was higher (P < 0.01) in patients with idiopathic tonic-clonic seizures (61%) than in those with partial seizures (43%). The addition of LTG to VPA (64% responders) produced a significantly better response (P < 0.001) than adding it to CBZ (41% responders) or PHT (38% responders). This effect was seen for partial (VPA, 57%; CBZ, 39%; PHT, 39%; P < 0.02) as well as tonic-clonic seizures (VPA, 70%; CBZ, 53%; PHT, 50%; NS). These data lend credence to the suggestion of therapeutic synergy between LTG and VPA.
...
PMID:Lamotrigine substitution study: evidence for synergism with sodium valproate? 105 Study Group. 912 23
Fifty-three UK and 59 USA people with multiple sclerosis (MS) answered anonymously the first questionnaire on cannabis use and MS. From 97 to 30% of the subjects reported cannabis improved (in descending rank order): spasticity, chronic pain of extremities, acute paroxysmal phenomenon,
tremor
, emotional dysfunction, anorexia/weight loss, fatigue states,
double vision
, sexual dysfunction, bowel and bladder dysfunctions, vision dimness, dysfunctions of walking and balance, and memory loss. The MS subjects surveyed have specific therapeutic reasons for smoking cannabis. The survey findings will aid in the design of a clinical trial of cannabis or cannabinoid administration to MS patients or to other patients with similar signs or symptoms.
...
PMID:The perceived effects of smoked cannabis on patients with multiple sclerosis. 925 98
The introduction on the French market of vigabatrin, gabapentin and lamotrigine has considerably diversified our conventional therapeutical schemes in epilepsies, as will be as amplified by the arrivals of topiramate, tiagabine and oxcarbazepine. Compared to the conventional drugs, these new products present more favorable pharmacokinetics, no or very weak interactions and a better tolerability, specially regarding the cognitive field. They should be used according to their spectrum of activity, function of their modes of action. In add-on trials on partial epilepsy patients all these new products have shown efficacy on partial and secondarily generalized seizures. Seizure frequency is reduced by at least 50 p. 100 in 30 to 50 p. 100 of the patients. A substantial number of patients can be rendered seizure-free with vigabatrin. Lamotrigine has a broader spectrum, as it is also efficacious on the different seizure types of generalized, symptomatic or idiopathic epilepsies. Main adverse events are non-specific central nervous system disturbances such as dizziness, drowsiness, ataxia,
tremor
or
diplopia
. More specifically, vigabatrin may induce weight gain and requires closer supervision in case of psychiatric history; lamotrigine which has also probable antidepressant properties, may induce skin rashs, rarely severe. Further data are needed for gabapentin which is now used at daily dosages which are two to three times those used in the initial studies. Gabamimetic agents may be worsening in some cases of generalized epilepsies, more specially on absence and myoclonic seizures. The most obvious benefits, some patients becoming seizure-free, are obtained in cases of intermediate severity, with a bitherapy including one of these new drugs. Developments in children are often delayed. Nevertheless the prognosis, including cognitive outcome, is considerably improved in infantile spasms with vigabatrin and in Lennox-Gastaut syndrome with lamotrigine and felbamate, the latter being highly toxic. For the moment in France, authorities have limited the use of all these new antiepileptic drugs to adjunctive therapy in epilepsies resisting to conventional drugs. But recent monotherapy data show similar efficacy with better tolerability. Once the pivotal, controlled studies have enabled to obtain regulatory approval, all these compounds must undergo a large-scale evaluation phase in order to better define dosages, long-term tolerability, indications and eventual contra-indications in the various epileptic syndromes, including children.
...
PMID:[Therapeutic options provided by new antiepileptic drugs]. 929 53
Seventy-seven families with autosomal dominant cerebellar ataxia were analyzed for the CAG repeat expansions causing spinocerebellar ataxia (SCA) types 1, 2, 3, and 6. The SCA1 mutation accounted for 9%, SCA2 for 10%, SCA3 for 42%, and SCA6 for 22% of German ataxia families. Seven of 27 SCA6 patients had no family history of ataxia. Age at onset correlated inversely with repeat length in all subtypes. Yet the average effect of one CAG unit on onset age was different for each SCA subtype. We compared clinical, electrophysiological, and magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) findings to identify phenotypic characteristics of genetically defined SCA subtypes. Slow saccades, hyporeflexia, myoclonus, and action
tremor
proposed SCA2. SCA3 patients frequently developed
diplopia
, severe spasticity or pronounced peripheral neuropathy, and impaired temperature discrimination, apart from ataxia. SCA6 presented with a predominantly cerebellar syndrome and patients often had onset after 55 years of age. SCA1 was characterized by markedly prolonged peripheral and central motor conduction times in motor evoked potentials. MRI scans showed pontine and cerebellar atrophy in SCA1 and SCA2. In SCA3, enlargement of the fourth ventricle was the main sequel of atrophy. SCA6 presented with pure cerebellar atrophy on MRI. However, overlap between the four SCA subtypes was broad.
...
PMID:Autosomal dominant cerebellar ataxia: phenotypic differences in genetically defined subtypes? 940 86
Lamotrigine is a novel anticonvulsant, which has proven to be effective both as add-on and monotherapy. 13 studies have demonstrated efficacy in 1096 children with a variety of seizure types. Tolerability information in these studies was collected in a standard fashion, where investigators reported all adverse events regardless of the perceived relationship to the test therapies. Generally, lamotrigine treatment in these clinical trials was generally given at higher initial doses and faster dose escalations than are currently recommended. Most adverse events associated with lamotrigine were mild to moderate in severity and did not result in discontinuation of treatment. Results from placebo-controlled, add-on trials showed that 85% of lamotrigine recipients experienced an adverse event compared with 83% of placebo recipients. Lamotrigine was associated with an increased risk of adverse events in the nervous system (dizziness,
tremor
, ataxia, and
diplopia
), gastrointestinal tract (nausea), and urinary tract (infection). The incidence of most adverse events was lower among lamotrigine recipients in monotherapy trials than in add-on trials, suggesting that concurrent anticonvulsant treatment or drug interactions can be confounding risk factors above that of lamotrigine treatment alone. Skin rash associated with hospitalisation and the discontinuation of study drug was reported more frequently by lamotrigine recipients than by placebo recipients and more frequently by children than by adults. The simultaneous use of valproic acid (sodium valproate) was associated with an increased incidence of rash. Lamotrigine, an effective broad spectrum anticonvulsant, is well tolerated in children. The qualitative features of adverse events that occur with lamotrigine treatment are similar for children and adults. The incidence of rash may be reduced with proper initial dosing and dose escalation.
...
PMID:The tolerability of lamotrigine in children. 1123 19
The aim of this study was to evaluate the safety of long-term treatment with tiagabine. We reviewed the case report forms of patients with refractory partial epilepsy who took tiagabine for longer than 6 months in two long-term studies. We classified all adverse events based on severity and persistence, and recorded the dose at onset of each adverse event. We then divided patients into those treated for 6-12 months, 12-24 months and > 24 months. We compared the adverse event profile and change in seizure frequency among the three groups. Forty-two patients took tiagabine for longer than 6 months. The mean duration of treatment was 22.6 months. The mean monthly seizure frequency was 12.7 at baseline and 8.1 at study termination (36% decrease). The most common adverse events were: tiredness (56%), headache (46%), dizziness (44%), visual symptoms (blurring, difficulty focusing,
diplopia
) (39%), altered mentation (32%), and
tremor
(31%). The adverse event profile was comparable among the three groups. Seizure frequency was significantly more improved in the > 24 months group. Long-term treatment with tiagabine is well tolerated. The most important predictor of long-term therapy with tiagabine was the degree of seizure improvement.
...
PMID:Safety of long-term treatment with tiagabine. 1098 2
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