Carbamazepine (CBZ) is known to have beneficial effects in the treatment of epilepsies and in the prophylaxis of affective disorders. Since increased transmembrane calcium fluxes and intracellular calcium concentrations play a key role in the generation of epilepsies and possibly also in the development of these psychiatric disorders the effects of CBZ on epileptic discharges (elicited by caffeine, penicillin and low Mg2+) in CA3 neurons of hippocampal slices were compared with those of the organic calcium antagonist verapamil and found to be almost the same.
Since the introduction of lithium ions in the acute treatment and in the prophylaxis of bipolar disorders the antiepileptic drugs valproate and carbamazepine have been in use for several years as mood stabilizers. In a number of open and controlled clinical studies predictors of response for the single drugs were investigated. These studies indicated that valproate was a predictor of good response in mixed (dysphoric) mania and bipolar rapid cycling. Moreover, valproate has a better response than lithium in secondary mania (organic origin) and atypical mania (episode sequence: depression-mania-euthymia rather than mania-depression-euthymia). The preferential efficacy in the spectrum of bipolar disorders of the new antiepileptic drugs lamotrigine and gabapentin must be analysed in more detail in future studies.
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