Seizure control and plasma concentrations of antiepileptic drugs (AEDs) were determined in a prospective, population-based study of 93 pregnancies (cases) of 70 patients with epilepsy. Seventy-seven cases were treated with monotherapy, which in 70 cases consisted of carbamazepine (CBZ) or phenytoin (PHT). Dosage was kept constant unless poor seizure control prompted an increase. Plasma concentrations were determined at monthly intervals throughout pregnancy and compared with baseline levels obtained at least 10 weeks postpartum. Both free and total CBZ and PHT concentrations were analyzed. Seizure frequency during pregnancy for the group as a whole was not different as compared with the 9 pregestational months and was unaltered or improved in 85% of cases. Total CBZ concentration was slightly lower during the third trimester as compared with baseline, whereas free concentration was unchanged. In contrast, PHT levels decreased steadily as pregnancy progressed. Total plasma concentration was 39% of baseline during the third trimester, whereas free PHT concentration decreased far less, being 82% of baseline level during the third trimester. No clear-cut relation could be demonstrated between seizure control and plasma concentrations, which may be explained by the limited changes in free AED concentrations and the small number of cases with an increased seizure frequency. Our results indicate that total plasma concentrations may be misleading and that monitoring of free concentrations, in particular of PHT concentrations, may be advantageous during pregnancy.
We studied all adult patients who between 1984 and 1989 were initially diagnosed at our hospital as having nonconvulsive status epilepticus. Thirty-two patients fulfilled the criteria, which included ictal EEG recordings. The annual incidence was 1.5 in 100,000 inhabitants. The median age at onset of status was 51 years. Ten patients had status as their first epileptic manifestation, but most patients had a previous history of epilepsy. Median duration of epilepsy at onset of status was 4 years. Fourteen patients had focal ictal seizure activity on EEG and thus met the criteria for complex partial status. Eighteen patients had generalized seizure activity on EEG, but only 6 of these had a history of absence epilepsy or juvenile myoclonic epilepsy. None had Lennox-Gastaut syndrome. The clinical features of status in the remaining 12 patients were in some respects similar to those of the patients with complex partial status. We hypothesize that the EEG seizure activity in these patients may have been generalized from an initial focus.
Free and total plasma concentrations of phenytoin (PHT) and carbamazepine (CBZ) and its active metabolite carbamazepine-10, 11-epoxide (CBZ-E) were determined in a prospective study of 86 pregnant epileptic women. The pharmacokinetics of PHT and CBZ during the three trimesters were compared with kinetics at least 10 weeks postpartum. Plasma clearance and unbound CBZ clearance were slightly decreased during the last trimester. Total and free plasma CBZ-E concentrations did not change significantly during pregnancy. Plasma PHT clearance, on the other hand, increased from the first trimester. A less pronounced increase was observed for clearance of unbound PHT; the increase was statistically significant only during the third trimester.
The majority of patients with epilepsy maintain seizure control during pregnancy. The apparently higher risk of seizures among women treated with oxcarbazepine and the more frequent increases in drug load in the oxcarbazepine and lamotrigine cohorts prompts further studies on relationships with pharmacokinetic changes. Risks associated with status epilepticus appear to be lower than previously reported.
summARY The serum concentration of prolactin is frequently increased after single epileptic seizures and has therefore been used as a method to differentiate between hysterical attacks and epileptic seizures. We determined plasma prolactin concentrations in fifteen patients with status epilepticus. Seven
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