Drug Classes 2 mnt baca

Antiepileptic Drugs

Antiepileptic drugs control seizures through diverse mechanisms including sodium channel blockade, GABA enhancement, and calcium current modulation. Drug selection depends on seizure type, comorbidities, and reproductive considerations.

## Mechanisms of Action

Antiepileptic drugs (AEDs) suppress seizures through several overlapping mechanisms:

- **Sodium channel blockade** -- Prolonging the inactivated state of voltage-gated sodium channels reduces repetitive neuronal firing. Phenytoin, carbamazepine, lamotrigine, lacosamide.
- **GABA enhancement** -- Increasing inhibitory neurotransmission via GABA-A receptor potentiation (benzodiazepines, phenobarbital), GABA transaminase inhibition (vigabatrin), or GABA reuptake blockade (tiagabine).
- **Calcium current modulation** -- Blocking T-type calcium channels in thalamic neurons suppresses absence seizures (ethosuximide). Reducing P/Q-type calcium channel function (gabapentin, pregabalin -- actually bind alpha-2-delta subunit).
- **SV2A binding** -- Levetiracetam and brivaracetam bind synaptic vesicle protein 2A, modulating neurotransmitter release.
- **Multiple mechanisms** -- Valproate affects sodium channels, T-type calcium channels, GABA metabolism, and NMDA receptors.

## Drug Selection by Seizure Type

| Seizure Type | First-Line Options | Avoid |
|-------------|-------------------|-------|
| Focal (partial) | Lamotrigine, levetiracetam, carbamazepine | Ethosuximide |
| Generalized tonic-clonic | Valproate, lamotrigine, levetiracetam | Carbamazepine (may worsen) |
| Absence | Ethosuximide, valproate | Carbamazepine, phenytoin |
| Myoclonic | Valproate, levetiracetam | Carbamazepine, gabapentin |

## Commonly Used AEDs

**Levetiracetam** -- Broad-spectrum, minimal drug interactions, renally cleared. First-line for many centers. Main side effect is irritability and behavioral changes.

**Lamotrigine** -- Effective for focal and generalized seizures. Requires slow titration to avoid Stevens-Johnson syndrome (especially with concurrent valproate). Weight-neutral, mood-stabilizing properties.

**Valproate** -- Broadest spectrum AED. Effective for nearly all seizure types. Significant concerns: teratogenicity (neural tube defects, cognitive impairment in exposed children), hepatotoxicity, pancreatitis, weight gain, tremor, thrombocytopenia.

**Carbamazepine** -- Effective for focal seizures. Potent CYP3A4 inducer with numerous drug interactions. Risk of hyponatremia (SIADH). HLA-B*1502 testing recommended in patients of Southeast Asian descent (Stevens-Johnson syndrome risk).

## Drug Interactions

Enzyme-inducing AEDs (phenytoin, carbamazepine, phenobarbital) accelerate metabolism of oral contraceptives, warfarin, immunosuppressants, and other AEDs. This has major implications for women of childbearing age -- hormonal contraceptive failure risk is real.

Valproate inhibits glucuronidation and can double lamotrigine levels, requiring dose adjustment when used together.

## Teratogenicity and Pregnancy

Valproate has the highest teratogenic risk (NTD 1-2%, major malformations 6-11%). It should be avoided in women of childbearing potential unless no alternative exists. Lamotrigine and levetiracetam have the most favorable safety profiles in pregnancy. High-dose folic acid (5 mg daily) is recommended for all women on AEDs planning pregnancy.

## Key Takeaways

- Seizure type determines drug choice -- not all AEDs work for all seizures.
- Levetiracetam and lamotrigine are often first-line due to broad efficacy and tolerability.
- Avoid valproate in women of childbearing age whenever possible.
- Enzyme-inducing AEDs complicate polypharmacy -- always check interactions.

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