Korean J Pediatr.  2004 Aug;47(8):821-826.

The Pharmacotherapy of Childhood Epilepsy

Affiliations
  • 1Department of Pediatrics, College of Medicine, Pusan National University, Busan, Korea. weareone@mdhouse.com

Abstract

Epilepsy is one of the most common and disabling neurologic disorders in childhood. The primary goal of epilepsy treatment is to choose the treatment modality that provides the best chance of improving the patient's quality of life. In addition to classic antiepileptic drugs, newly developed antiepileptic drugs ketogenic diet, epilepsy surgery, and vagal nerve stimulation have improved the ability to treat seizure disorders during the past decades. The mainstay of treatment remains pharmacotherapy. The factors that affect decision of whether to treat seizures with medications and which antiepileptic drugs to use include the likelihood of seizure recurrence, type and severity of seizures, available antiepileptic drug efficacies and toxicities, need for hematologic monitoring, ease to dosing, underlying illness, pharmacologic interaction, and school and other social issues. In this article, we will describe the principle of drug selection for seizure disorder in pediatric patients and the efficacies and adverse effects of the typical and new antiepileptics. Information about the available antiepileptic drugs will help the pediatrician to select the best drug for children with epilepsy.

Keyword

Childhood epilepsy; Antiepileptic drug; Epilepsy treatment

MeSH Terms

Anticonvulsants
Child
Drug Therapy*
Epilepsy*
Humans
Ketogenic Diet
Nervous System Diseases
Quality of Life
Recurrence
Seizures
Vagus Nerve Stimulation
Anticonvulsants
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