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    Epilepsia. 1992 Jan-Feb;33(1):158-64.

    Treatment of intractable childhood epilepsy with high-dose valproate.

    Source

    Department of Child Neurology, Okayama University Medical School, Japan.

    Abstract

    Forty-six children with refractory epilepsy (12 with symptomatic generalized epilepsy, 14 with symptomatic partial epilepsy, and 20 with undetermined epilepsy) were treated by high-dose (serum level above 100 micrograms/ml) valproate (VPA) therapy. Monotherapy was used with 34 patients and two drugs with 12. Serum VPA concentrations ranged from 105.1 to 198.4 micrograms/ml. Assessment of initial response to treatment, after the serum level had reached the appropriate level, showed seizures to be completely controlled in 15 (32.6%) of 46 patients and improved in 12 (26.1%) (50% or more). Follow-up of more than 6 months after the time of initial response showed control of seizures in 14 (30.4%) and improvement in 11 (23.9%). The initial effect on EEG was the disappearance of epileptic discharges in 3 (6.5%) of 46 patients and marked improvement in 15 (32.6%). Follow-up revealed the disappearance of epileptic discharges in 7 (15.2%) and marked improvement in 9 patients (19.6%). High-dose VPA therapy was especially effective for West syndrome and for epilepsy with continuous spike-waves during slow-wave sleep. Control of atypical absences and myoclonic seizures was relatively good. Hypofibrinogenemia and thrombocytopenia were sometimes encountered but these side effects were reversible with reduction of dosage.

    PMID:
    1733751
    [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]

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