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Carbamazepine-exacerbated epilepsy in children and adolescents
Authors:Charles S Horn MD  Stewart B Ater MD and Daniel L Hurst MD
Institution:

a Department of Pediatrics; Adolescent Medicine Service; Fitzsimons Army Medical Center;, Aurora, Colorado, USA.

b Department of Pediatrics and Neurology; University of Colorado Health Sciences Center;, Denver, Colorado, USA.

c Department of Medical and Surgical Neurology; Texas Tech University Health Sciences Center;, Lubbock, Texas, USA.

Abstract:Forty-nine children and adolescents whose seizures reportedly worsened while receiving carbamazepine (CBZ) were studied retrospectively. Twenty-six patients met criteria for excellent documentation of carbamazepine-exacerbated seizures. Four epileptic syndromes were particularly affected: childhood absence epilepsy; focal symptomatic, frontal lobe epilepsy; Lennox-Gastaut syndrome; and severe myoclonic epilepsy of infancy. Eight of the 26 patients developed new-onset absence seizures and three patients with established absence epilepsy experienced absence status. Other seizure types, including atonic, tonic-clonic, and myoclonic, developed in eight patients treated with CBZ, and new generalized spike-and-wave discharges were observed in electroencephalograms of nine patients. CBZ is a widely used, effective antiepileptic drug, particularly for partial or partial complex seizures; however, if uncontrolled, generalized seizures occur after CBZ is prescribed for children or adolescents with absence or mixed seizures, a trial of CBZ discontinuation is warranted. The data reported here do not permit calculation of the incidence of this phenomenon.
Keywords:
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