Concentration-effect relationships with carbamazepine and its epoxide on psychomotor and cognitive function in epileptic patients.
Open Access
- 1 July 1988
- journal article
- research article
- Published by BMJ in Journal of Neurology, Neurosurgery & Psychiatry
- Vol. 51 (7) , 929-933
- https://doi.org/10.1136/jnnp.51.7.929
Abstract
A battery of psychometric tests was administered to 85 patients with epilepsy, of whom 26 were untreated, 40 received carbamazepine monotherapy and 19 took carbamazepine with another anticonvulsant. Carbamazepine alone had little effect on performance, but carbamazepine polypharmacy produced significant impairment. Increasing concentrations of carbamazepine (four tests) and its active metabolite, carbamazepine 10,11 epoxide (seven tests), correlated with decreasing performance in the monotherapy patients.This publication has 22 references indexed in Scilit:
- Psychosocial Sequelae of Epilepsy: The Role of Associated Cerebral PathologyEpilepsia, 1987
- Behavioral Characteristics of Epilepsy Patients Compared with Normal ControlsEpilepsia, 1986
- Correlates of Generalized Tonic‐Clonic Seizures with Intellectual, Neuropsychological, Emotional, and Social Function in Patients with EpilepsyEpilepsia, 1986
- Behavioral Toxicity Associated with Antiepileptic Drugs: Concepts and Methods of AssessmentEpilepsia, 1986
- SIDE-EFFECTS INDUCED BY CARBAMAZEPINE-10, 11-EPOXIDEThe Lancet, 1985
- Anticonvulsant Drugs and Cognitive FunctionsEpilepsia, 1982
- Effect of reduction of anticonvulsants on wellbeing.BMJ, 1982
- Emotional complications of adolescent grand mal epilepsyThe Journal of Pediatrics, 1979
- Serum Anticonvulsant Concentrations in Epileptic Patients with Mental SymptomsThe British Journal of Psychiatry, 1974
- A Survey of Epilepsy in Fourteen General PracticesEpilepsia, 1959