1. Anti-seizure medication load is not correlated with early termination of seizure spread
- Author
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Evans, Nathan, Gascoigne, Sarah J., Besne, Guillermo M., Thornton, Chris, Schroeder, Gabrielle M., Chowdhury, Fahmida A, Diehl, Beate, Duncan, John S, McEvoy, Andrew W, Miserocchi, Anna, de Tisi, Jane, Taylor, Peter N., and Wang, Yujiang
- Subjects
Quantitative Biology - Neurons and Cognition - Abstract
Anti-seizure medications (ASMs) are the mainstay of treatment for epilepsy, yet their effect on seizure spread is not fully understood. Higher ASM doses have been associated with shorter and less severe seizures. Our objective was to test if this effect was due to limiting seizure spread through early termination of otherwise unchanged seizures. We retrospectively examined intracranial EEG (iEEG) recordings in 15 subjects that underwent ASM tapering during pre-surgical monitoring. We estimated ASM plasma concentrations based on pharmaco-kinetic modelling. In each subject, we identified seizures that followed the same onset and initial spread patterns, but some seizures terminated early (truncated seizures), and other seizures continued to spread (continuing seizures). We compared ASM concentrations at the times of truncated seizures and continuing seizures. We found no substantial difference between ASM concentrations when truncated vs. continuing seizures occurred (Mean difference = 4%, sd = 29%, p=0.6). Our results indicate that ASM did not appear to halt established seizures in this cohort. Further research is needed to understand how ASM may modulate seizure duration and severity.
- Published
- 2024