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Memory loss isoniazid

Peripheral neuropathy is observed in 10-20% of patients given dosages greater than 5 mg/kg/d, but it is infrequently seen with the standard 300-mg adult dose. Peripheral neuropathy is more likely to occur in slow acetylators and patients with predisposing conditions such as malnutrition, alcoholism, diabetes, AIDS, and uremia. Neuropathy is due to a relative pyridoxine deficiency. Isoniazid promotes excretion of pyridoxine, and this toxicity is readily reversed by administration of pyridoxine in a dosage as low as 10 mg/d. Central nervous system toxicity, which is less common, includes memory loss, psychosis, and seizures. These may also respond to pyridoxine. [Pg.1045]

Isoniazid can cause neuropsychiatric syndromes, including euphoria, transient impairment of memory, separation of ideas and reality, loss of self-control, psychoses (421), and obsessive-compulsive neurosis (422). Isoniazid should be used with caution in patients with pre-existing psychoses, as it can cause relapse of paranoid schizophrenia (423). Patients on chronic dialysis appear to be vulnerable to neurological adverse drug reactions, because of abnormal metabolism of uremic toxins. It is therefore recommended that a... [Pg.678]

Isoniazid may precipitate convulsions, usually in patients with known seizure disorders. Optic neuritis also has occurred. Muscle twitching, dizziness, ataxia, paresthesias, stupor, and potentially fatal encephalopathy are other manifestations of neurotoxicity. A number of mental abnormalities may appear, including euphoria, transient memory inpairment, loss of self-control, and psychosis. [Pg.785]


See other pages where Memory loss isoniazid is mentioned: [Pg.282]   
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