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Anticonvulsants epilepsy

Seizures occur more infrequently in horses than in dogs and cats. Seizures are seen in adult horses from brain trauma, bacterial meningitis, viral encephalitis and, rarely, hepatic encephalopathy or vascular accidents. Convulsions are seen in young neonatal foals with NMS as a result of brain hypoxia and in Arabian foals aged 3-9 months (idiopathic Arabian epilepsy). Anticonvulsant therapy is used to prevent the spread of the seizure focus, increase (raise) the seizure threshold and decrease the electrical excitement of abnormal... [Pg.149]

However, the story does not end with diuretics, the agents that promote renal elimination of excess electrolytes and fluid, but the study of these diuretics led to further agents useful in the treatment of hypertension, of epilepsy (anticonvulsants), of glaucoma, and of diabetes insipidus—i.e., antidiuretics. [Pg.94]

Asparagus racemosus Willd. Liliaceae Ind, Him, Ksh - epilepsy anticonvulsant - 36 63... [Pg.513]

Cj jH,2N202. Used as its sodium salt, which is a white hygroscopic powder. Unstable, readily absorbing carbon dioxide and liberating phenytoin. Made by treating a-bromodi-phenylacetylurea with alcoholic ammonia. It has a mild hypnotic and strong anticonvulsant action, and is used in the treatment of grand-mal and focal epilepsy. [Pg.306]

Benzodiazepines. Several BZs have anticonvulsant activity and ate used for the treatment of epilepsy producing their anticonvulsant actions via interactions with the GABA /BZ receptor complex to enhance inhibitory GABAergic transmission (1). The anticonvulsant actions of the BZs tend to tolerate upon chronic usage in six months, and BZs also lead to withdrawal symptomatology. Other side effects include sedation, ataxia, and cognitive impairment. [Pg.535]

The anticonvulsant primidone (1035) resembles phenobarbital but lacks the 2-oxo substituent. It was introduced in 1952 and has remained a valuable drug for controlling grand mal and psychomotor epilepsy. As might be expected, primidone is metabolized to yield phenobarbital (1034 X = 0) and C-ethyl-C-phenylmalondiamide (1036), both of which have marked anticonvulsant properties however, primidone does have intrinsic activity and an appropriate mixture of its metabolites has only a fraction of its activity (73MI21303). Primidone may be made in several ways, of which desulfurization by Raney nickel of the 2-thiobarbiturate (1034 X = S) or treatment of the diamide (1036) with formic acid (at 190 °C) seem to be the most satisfactory (54JCS3263). [Pg.153]

Bromide therapy introduced by Lacock as a sedative and anticonvulsant for treatment of epilepsy... [Pg.790]

Formal oxidation of pyrrolidine to the succinimide stage affords a series of compounds used as anticonvulsant agents for treatment of seizures in petit mal epilepsy. Knoevnagel condensation of benzaldehyde with ethyl cyanoacetate affords the unsaturated ester, 9. Conjugate addition of cyanide ion leads to the di-nitrile ester (10). Hydrolysis in mineral acid affords the succinic acid (11), presumably by decarboxylation of the intermediate tricarboxyllie acid. Lactamization with methylamine gives phensuximide (12). ... [Pg.226]

A large number of anticonvulsant dtugs commonly in use for focal epilepsies act on fast voltage-dependent... [Pg.127]

Mr. Parks, age 32 years, has recently received a diagnosis of epilepsy. He has been taking the anticonvulsant carbamazepine, but his seizures are not yet under control. Mr. Parks asks you how long it will take to cure his epilepsy. Determine how you would respond to Mr. Parks. [Pg.263]

Folate supplements will rectify the megaloblastic anemia of vitamin Bj2 deficiency but may hasten the development of the (irreversible) nerve damage found in B,2 deficiency. There is also antagonism between fohc acid and the anticonvulsants used in the treatment of epilepsy. [Pg.494]

In parallel with the identification of distinct transporters for GABA there has been continued interest in the development of selective blockers of these transporters and the therapeutic potential that could result from prolonging the action of synaptically released GABA. It has been known for a long time that certain pro-drugs of nipecotic add (e.g. nipecotic acid ethyl ester) are able to cross the blood-brain barrier and are effective anticonvulsants in experimental models of epilepsy. More recently, several different systemically active lipophillic compounds have been described that act selectively on GAT-1, GAT-2 or GAT-3 (Fig. 11.4). Of these, tiagabine (gabitiil), a derivative of nipecotic acid that acts preferentially on GAT -1, has proved clinically useful in cases of refractory epilepsy. [Pg.231]

One unwanted side-effect of phenytoin is its anti-folate activity. A programme of synthetic chemistry to manipulate the structure of the anti-folate compound pyri-methium to try to replace that property with anticonvulsant activity resulted in the synthesis of lamotrigine. It proved to be an effective AED in partial and generalised epilepsy but experience has found it also to be of value in absence seizures. [Pg.347]

Hydantoins are well-known anticonvulsant agents and as such have found extensive use in the treatment of epilepsy. Replacement of one of the carbonyl groups by thiocarbonyl is consistent with anticonvulsant activity. Thus, condensation of the ethyl ester... [Pg.260]

Anticonvulsant action of the nucleoside transport inhibitor, soluflazine, on synaptic and non-synaptic epileptogenesis in the guinea-pig hippocampus. Epilepsy Res. 2 (2), 65-71. [Pg.353]

Anticonvulsant A drug used in the treatment of epilepsy, and to reduce the risk of seizures during detoxification from sedative-hypnotics. More recently these drugs have been used in the clinical management of bipolar disorders. [Pg.237]

GABA GABAa Rat brain Alcoholism, CNS, anesthesia, epilepsy, anxiety, depression, Parkinson s disease, pain, migraine, respiratory gastrointestinal, diabetes, obesity Synaptic inhibition, decrease in neuronal excitability increase in cellular chloride influx, neuroprotection, sedation/hypnosis, anticonvulsant activity muscle relaxation... [Pg.122]


See other pages where Anticonvulsants epilepsy is mentioned: [Pg.54]    [Pg.54]    [Pg.256]    [Pg.536]    [Pg.538]    [Pg.528]    [Pg.281]    [Pg.462]    [Pg.127]    [Pg.127]    [Pg.128]    [Pg.130]    [Pg.254]    [Pg.931]    [Pg.254]    [Pg.259]    [Pg.328]    [Pg.338]    [Pg.348]    [Pg.83]    [Pg.462]    [Pg.102]    [Pg.290]    [Pg.296]    [Pg.189]    [Pg.16]    [Pg.20]    [Pg.147]    [Pg.528]    [Pg.388]    [Pg.136]    [Pg.189]    [Pg.327]    [Pg.206]    [Pg.269]   


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