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Antidepressant drugs and seizure
susceptibility: from in vitro data to clinical
practice.
Pisani F, Spina E, Oteri
G.
Institute of Neurological and Neurosurgical Sciences,
First Neurological Clinic, Messina, Italy.
The use of
antidepressant drugs (ADs) in patients with epilepsy still raises
uncertainties because of the widespread conviction that this class of
drugs facilitates seizures. A detailed knowledge of this issue in its
various aspects may help in optimal management of patients suffering
concurrently from epilepsy and depression. This article reviews the
available data in vitro in animals and humans concerning the known
potential of various ADs to induce epileptic seizures. Emphasis has been
placed on those variables that may generate confusion in interpreting
the results of the various studies. Most ADs at therapeutic dosages
exhibit in nonepileptic patients a seizure risk close to that reported
for the first spontaneous seizure in the general population (i.e.,
<0.1%). In patients taking high AD doses, seizure incidence rises
markedly and may reach values up to 40%. With a patient history of
epilepsy and/or concomitant drugs that act on neuronal excitability, low
or therapeutic AD doses may be sufficient to trigger seizures.
Experimental data are in partial conflict with human data on the
relative potential seizure risk of the various ADs. Therefore, a
reliable scale for assigning a relative value to an individual AD or to
single AD classes cannot be made. It appears fair to say that
maprotiline and amoxapine exhibit the greatest seizure risk, whereas
trazodone, fluoxetine, and fluvoxamine exhibit the least. Some ADs may
also display antiepileptic effects, especially in low doses, in
experimental models of epilepsy and in humans, but the mechanism of this
action is largely unknown. The available data suggest that ADs may
display both convulsant and anticonvulsant effects and that the most
important factor in determining the direction of a given compound in
terms of excitation/inhibition is drug dosage. It is probable that drugs
that increase serotonergic transmission are less convulsant or, even,
more anticonvulsant than others. Because of mutual pharmacokinetic
interactions between antiepileptic drugs and ADs, with consequent marked
changes in plasma concentrations, it remains to be established whether
or not plasma AD levels that are effective against depression also
facilitate seizures. Finally, exploring the mechanisms through which ADs
modulate neuronal excitability might open new possibilities in
antiepileptic drug development.
Publication Types:
PMID: 10609604 [PubMed - indexed for
MEDLINE]
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