Cannabis has been considered as a therapeutic strategy to control intractable epilepsy. Several cannabis components, especially cannabidiol (CBD), induce antiseizure effects. However, additional information is necessary to identify the types of epilepsies that can be controlled by these components and the mechanisms involved in these effects. This review presents a summary of the discussion carried out during the 2nd Latin American Workshop on Neurobiology of Epilepsy entitled “Cannabinoid and epilepsy: myths and realities.” This event was carried out during the 10th Latin American Epilepsy Congress in San José de Costa Rica (September 28, 2018). The review focuses to discuss the use of CBD as a new therapeutic strategy to control drug‐resistant epilepsy. It also indicates the necessity to consider the evaluation of unconventional targets such as P‐glycoprotein, to explain the effects of CBD in drug‐resistant epilepsy.
Epilepsy is a common chronic neurological disorder that affects more than 50 million people worldwide. 1 Antiseizure drug that serves as the first line of treatment is used to control seizures. However, one-third of patients with epilepsy suffer from drug-resistant epilepsy (DRE) because they fail to achieve control of seizures despite the appropriate treatment schemes used (in monotherapy or various combinations). 2 According to the target hypothesis that explains the drug-resistance phenotype in epilepsy, failure to control epileptic activity by antiseizure medication (ASM) results in losing therapeutic efficacy as a consequence of alterations in the structure and/or function of their targets 3 (Figure 1). In this regard, adopting different therapeutic targets in patients with DRE is crucial, which include alterations in voltage-gated sodium channels (VGSCs) and γ-aminobutyric acid (GABA) receptors.Some studies confirm that resected brain tissue obtained from patients with drug-resistant temporal lobe epilepsy (DR-TLE) who have undergone surgery show reduced sensitivity to carbamazepine, a drug that inhibits VGSC. 4,5 Experimental models have not yet reproduced this condition in DRE. However, studies in models of acute seizures and epilepsy have demonstrated induced alterations in VGSC similar to those detected in brain tissue of patients with the DRE. [6][7][8]
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