levetiracetam and Heart-Arrest

levetiracetam has been researched along with Heart-Arrest* in 14 studies

Other Studies

14 other study(ies) available for levetiracetam and Heart-Arrest

ArticleYear
[Response to perampanel in a patient with chronic post-hypoxic myoclonus].
    Revista de neurologia, 2021, Aug-01, Volume: 73, Issue:3

    Chronic post-hypoxic myoclonus is a condition in which the predominant clinical picture is myoclonus following hypoxic brain damage, usually due to cardiorespiratory arrest. It is a condition that is usually treated with antiepileptic drugs, in most cases with a modest clinical response.. We report the case of a patient who started with jerking movements, compatible with myoclonus in the four limbs and the face the day after recovering from a cardiorespiratory arrest. An electroencephalogram was performed during which the myoclonias were recorded with no electrical correlates. During admission, and in successive visits after discharge, different antiepileptic treatments were tried for the myoclonias, which were refractory and affected the patient's quality of life. Two years after onset, treatment with perampanel up to a dose of 4 mg was initiated and the patient reported a significant clinical improvement, as evidenced in the visits.. Perampanel may be an effective alternative for the treatment of myoclonias in patients with chronic post-hypoxic myoclonus.. Respuesta a perampanel en un paciente con mioclono posthipóxico crónico.. Introducción. El mioclono posthipóxico crónico es un cuadro cuya clínica predominante son las mioclonías que acontecen tras un daño cerebral hipóxico, generalmente por parada cardiorrespiratoria. Es una entidad que se trata generalmente con fármacos antiepilépticos, con una modesta respuesta clínica en la mayoría de los casos. Caso clínico. Paciente que comienza con movimientos de sacudidas, compatibles con mioclonías de las cuatro extremidades y faciales al día siguiente de una parada cardiorrespiratoria recuperada. Se realizó un electroencefalograma durante el cual se registraron las mioclonías sin presentar correlato eléctrico. Durante el ingreso, y en sucesivas visitas tras el alta, se probaron diferentes tratamientos antiepilépticos para las mioclonías, que fueron refractarias y comportaron una afectación de la calidad de vida del paciente. Tras dos años de evolución, se inició tratamiento con perampanel hasta una dosis de 4 mg y el paciente refirió una mejoría clínica importante, evidenciada en consultas. Conclusiones. El perampanel puede suponer una alternativa eficaz para el tratamiento de las mioclonías en pacientes con mioclono posthipóxico crónico.

    Topics: Anticonvulsants; Carcinoma, Papillary; Clonazepam; Drug Therapy, Combination; Electroencephalography; Heart Arrest; Humans; Hypoxia, Brain; Levetiracetam; Male; Middle Aged; Myoclonus; Nitriles; Postoperative Complications; Pyridones; Seizures; Thyroid Neoplasms; Thyroidectomy; Valproic Acid

2021
Posthypoxic action myoclonus (the Lance-Adams syndrome).
    BMJ case reports, 2020, Apr-16, Volume: 13, Issue:4

    Topics: Heart Arrest; Humans; Hypoxia, Brain; Levetiracetam; Male; Middle Aged; Myoclonus; Syndrome; Valproic Acid

2020
Ictal asystole: a diagnostic and management conundrum.
    The journal of the Royal College of Physicians of Edinburgh, 2019, Volume: 49, Issue:2

    We report two cases of adults presenting with transient loss of consciousness (TLoC) followed by a rapid recovery. Careful history taking revealed a stereotyped prodrome of déjà vu, raising the possibility of these events being focal seizures rather than syncope. The patients were commenced on antiepileptic drugs (AEDs) at the same time as having cardiac monitoring organised. This confirmed asystole during the seizure symptoms, resulting in TLoC. It was assumed that the cardiac arrhythmia explained the entire picture, a permanent pacemaker (PPM) was inserted, and the AEDs were withdrawn in one patient and not commenced in the other. However, they both subsequently presented with worsening seizures, including generalised tonic-clonic seizures, despite a functioning pacemaker. The seizures improved on restarting AEDs. The cases illustrate the diagnostic and management difficulties of patients presenting with ictal asystole, a condition that requires input from various medical specialities. There is no strong evidence base for the management of ictal asystole, but we favour a combined approach of AEDs and PPM insertion.

    Topics: Anticonvulsants; Bradycardia; Carbamazepine; Deja Vu; Epilepsy; Female; Heart Arrest; Humans; Lamotrigine; Levetiracetam; Male; Middle Aged; Pacemaker, Artificial; Unconsciousness

2019
Association of antiepileptic drugs with resolution of epileptiform activity after cardiac arrest.
    Resuscitation, 2019, Volume: 142

    We tested the impact of antiepileptic drug (AED) administration on post-cardiac arrest epileptiform electroencephalographic (EEG) activity.. We studied an observational cohort of comatose subjects treated at a single academic medical center after cardiac arrest from September 2010 to January 2018. We aggregated the observed EEG patterns into 5 categories: suppressed; discontinuous background with superimposed epileptiform activity; discontinuous background without epileptiform features; continuous background with epileptiform activity; and continuous background without epileptiform activity. We calculated overall probabilities of transitions between EEG states in a multistate model, then used Aalen's additive regression to test if AEDs or hypothermia are associated with a change in these probabilities.. Overall, 828 subjects had EEG-monitoring for 42,840 h with a median of 40 [IQR 23-64] h per subject. Among patients with epileptiform findings on initial monitoring, 50% transitioned at least once to a non-epileptiform, non-suppressed state. By contrast, 19% with non-epileptiform initial activity transitioned to an epileptiform state at least once. Overall, 568 (78%) patients received at least one AED. Among patients with continuous EEG background activity, valproate, levetiracetam and lower body temperature were each associated with an increased probability of transition from epileptiform states to non-epileptiform states, where patients with discontinuous EEG background activity no agent linked to an increased probability of transitioning from epileptiform states.. After cardiac arrest, the impact of AEDs may depend on the presence of continuous cortical background activity. These data serve to inform experimental work to better define the opportunities to improve neurologic care post-cardiac arrest.

    Topics: Anticonvulsants; Cohort Studies; Coma; Combined Modality Therapy; Electroencephalography; Female; Heart Arrest; Humans; Hypothermia, Induced; Hypoxia, Brain; Levetiracetam; Male; Middle Aged; Nervous System Diseases; Outcome and Process Assessment, Health Care; Resuscitation; Seizures; United States; Valproic Acid

2019
Early Lance-Adams syndrome after cardiac arrest: Prevalence, time to return to awareness, and outcome in a large cohort.
    Resuscitation, 2017, Volume: 115

    Early myoclonus after cardiac arrest (CA) is traditionally viewed as a poor prognostic sign (status myoclonus). However, some patients may present early Lance-Adams syndrome (LAS): under appropriate treatment, they can reach a satisfactory functional outcome. Our aim was to describe their profile, focusing on pharmacologic management in the ICU, time to return of awareness, and long-term prognosis.. Adults with early LAS (defined as generalized myoclonus within 96h, with epileptiform EEG within 48h after CA) were retrospectively identified in our CA registry between 2006 and 2016. Functional outcome was assessed through cerebral performance categories (CPC) at 3 months, CPC 1-2 defined good outcome.. Among 458 consecutive patients, 7 (1.5%) developed early LAS (4 women, median age 59 years). Within 72h after CA, in normothemia and off sedation, all showed preserved brainstem reflexes and localized pain. All patients were initially treated with valproate, levetiracetam and clonazepam; additional agents, including propofol and midazolam, were prescribed in the majority. First signs of awareness occurred after 3-23 days (median 11.8); 3/7 reached a good outcome at 3 months.. Early after CA, myoclonus together with a reactive, epileptiform EEG, preserved evoked potentials and brainstem reflexes suggests LAS. This condition was managed with a combination of highly dosed, large spectrum antiepileptic agents including propofol and midazolam. Even if awakening was at times delayed, good outcome occurred in a substantial proportion of patients.

    Topics: Adult; Aged, 80 and over; Anticonvulsants; Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation; Clonazepam; Drug Combinations; Electroencephalography; Female; Heart Arrest; Humans; Intensive Care Units; Levetiracetam; Male; Middle Aged; Myoclonus; Piracetam; Prospective Studies; Registries; Seizures; Syndrome; Time Factors; Valproic Acid

2017
Marked EEG worsening following Levetiracetam overdose: How a pharmacological issue can confound coma prognosis.
    Clinical neurology and neurosurgery, 2017, Volume: 152

    Levetiracetam is an anti-epileptic drug commonly used in intensive care when seizure is suspected as a possible cause of coma. We propose to question the cofounding effect of Levetiracetam during the prognostication process in a case of anoxic coma. We report the story of a young woman presenting a comatose state following a hypoxic cardiac arrest. After a first EEG presenting an intermediate EEG pattern, a seizure suspicion led to prescribe Levetiracetam. The EEG showed then the appearance of burst suppression, which was compatible with a very severe pattern of post-anoxic coma. This aggravation was in fact related to an overdose of Levetiracetam (the only medication introduced recently) and was reversible after Levetiracetam cessation. The increased plasmatic dosages of Levetiracetam confirming this overdose could have been favoured by a moderate reduction of renal clearance, previously underestimated because of a low body-weight. This EEG dynamic was unexpected under Levetiracetam and could sign a functional instability after anoxia. Burst suppression is classically observed with high doses of anaesthetics, but is not expected after a minor anti-epileptic drug. This report proposes that Levetiracetam tolerance might not be straightforward after brain lesions and engages us to avoid confounding factors during the awakening prognostication, which is mainly based on the severity of the EEG. Hence, prognosis should not be decided on an isolated parameter, especially if the dynamic is atypical after a new prescription, even for well-known drugs. For any suspicion, the drug's dosage and replacement should be managed before any premature care's withdrawal.

    Topics: Adult; Anticonvulsants; Coma; Drug Overdose; Electroencephalography; Female; Heart Arrest; Humans; Hypoxia; Levetiracetam; Piracetam

2017
Cardiac sodium channel blockade after an intentional ingestion of lacosamide, cyclobenzaprine, and levetiracetam: Case report.
    Clinical toxicology (Philadelphia, Pa.), 2015, Volume: 53, Issue:6

    Lacosamide treats partial seizures by enhancing slow inactivation of voltage-gated sodium channels. The described cardiac toxicity of lacosamide in the literature to date includes atrioventricular blockade (PR prolongation), atrial flutter, atrial fibrillation, sinus pauses, ventricular tachycardia and a single cardiac arrest. We report a second case of cardiac arrest following an intentional lacosamide overdose.. A 16 year-old female with a seizure disorder was found unresponsive in pulseless ventricular tachycardia after intentionally ingesting 4.5 g (76 mg/kg) lacosamide, 120 mg (2 mg/kg) cyclobenzaprine and an unknown amount of levetiracetam. Exact time of ingestion was unknown. Her initial electrocardiogram (ECG) demonstrated sinus tachycardia at 139 beats per minute, QRS duration 112 ms, and terminal R-wave in lead aVR > 3 mm. Despite treatment with 150 mEq of sodium bicarbonate, she had persistent EKG findings eight hours after presentation. Her serum lacosamide concentration nine hours after presentation was elevated at 22.8 μg/mL, while serum cyclobenzaprine concentration was 16 ng/mL (therapeutic: 10-30 ng/mL), and serum levetiracetam concentration was 22.7 μg/mL (therapeutic: 12-46 μg/mL). On hospital day three, ECG demonstrated resolution of the terminal R-wave with QRS of 78 ms. The patient recovered without physical or neurologic sequelae.. The patient's lacosamide, cyclobenzaprine and levetiracetam overdose was associated with QRS prolongation and terminal right axis deviation--suggesting sodium channel blockade as a likely etiology for her cardiac arrest. Cyclobenzaprine has potential for sodium channel blockade and ventricular dysrhythmias although cardiac toxicity due to cyclobenzaprine alone is rare. The combination of cyclobenzaprine with lacosamide may have resulted in cardiovascular collapse. In conclusion, overdose of lacosamide combined with therapeutic concentrations of sodium channel blocking xenobiotics may cause cardiac conduction delays and cardiac arrest.

    Topics: Acetamides; Adolescent; Amitriptyline; Anticonvulsants; Drug Interactions; Drug Overdose; Electrocardiography; Epilepsy; Female; Heart Arrest; Humans; Lacosamide; Levetiracetam; Piracetam; Risk Factors; Sodium Bicarbonate; Sodium Channel Blockers; Sodium Channels; Suicide, Attempted; Tachycardia, Ventricular; Treatment Outcome

2015
Ictal asystole in epilepsy patients undergoing inpatient video-EEG monitoring.
    Neurosciences (Riyadh, Saudi Arabia), 2014, Volume: 19, Issue:4

    Ictal asystole (IA) is uncommonly diagnosed and has been implicated as a potential cause of sudden unexpected death in epilepsy. Sudden unexpected death in epilepsy is an increasingly recognizable condition and is more likely to occur in patients with medically intractable epilepsy and those suffering from convulsive epilepsy. We report 2 cases of recent onset of prolonged syncope and unrevealing cardiac work up. The inpatient video-EEG monitoring recorded left temporal ictal discharges followed by IA. Although the role of cardiac pacing is controversial in these patients, both patients had favorable outcome following cardiac pacemaker insertion. This report demonstrates the variability in IA pathophysiology and clinical manifestations. It also advocates that cardiac pacing might have a role in the management of IA.

    Topics: Aged; Anticonvulsants; Bradycardia; Electroencephalography; Epilepsy, Temporal Lobe; Female; Heart Arrest; Humans; Inpatients; Levetiracetam; Middle Aged; Monitoring, Physiologic; Pacemaker, Artificial; Phenytoin; Piracetam; Syncope; Video Recording

2014
Ictal bradycardia and asystole in an adult with a focal left insular lesion.
    Clinical neurology and neurosurgery, 2013, Volume: 115, Issue:9

    Topics: Anticonvulsants; Benzodiazepines; Bradycardia; Brain Diseases; Cerebral Cortex; Clobazam; Drug Resistance; Electroencephalography; Heart Arrest; Humans; Lamotrigine; Levetiracetam; Magnetic Resonance Imaging; Male; Middle Aged; Piracetam; Seizures; Triazines

2013
[A case with recurrent asystole due to breath-holding spells: successful treatment with levetiracetam].
    No to hattatsu = Brain and development, 2012, Volume: 44, Issue:6

    Topics: Apnea; Autonomic Nervous System; Breath Holding; Female; Heart Arrest; Humans; Infant; Levetiracetam; Piracetam

2012
Recurrent sinus arrest and asystole due to breath-holding spell in a toddler; recovery with levetiracetam-therapy.
    Circulation, 2010, Dec-21, Volume: 122, Issue:25

    Topics: Anticonvulsants; Electrocardiography; European Union; Female; Heart Arrest; Humans; Infant; Levetiracetam; Piracetam; Recurrence; Respiration; Sinus Arrest, Cardiac; Treatment Outcome

2010
Post-hypoxic myoclonic status: the prognosis is not always hopeless.
    Critical care and resuscitation : journal of the Australasian Academy of Critical Care Medicine, 2009, Volume: 11, Issue:1

    A 67-year-old woman abruptly developed acute pulmonary oedema, severe bradycardia and then cardiac arrest while in hospital 6 days after an elective hernia repair. She was resuscitated, intubated and transferred to the intensive care unit. Within 24 hours, she began to display repetitive, generalised myoclonic jerks that failed to respond to therapy with conventional anticonvulsants; an electroencephalogram confirmed myoclonic status. After administration of levetiracetam was begun on Day 3, myoclonic jerks reduced, and there was gradual clinical improvement. By Day 6 after the arrest, the patient was alert and oriented (Glasgow Coma Score, 15/15). Although she died on Day 11 after massive haemoptysis and cardiac arrest, this patient demonstrates the possibility of reasonable neurological recovery despite early onset of myoclonic status.

    Topics: Aged; Anticonvulsants; Critical Care; Female; Heart Arrest; Humans; Hypoxia; Levetiracetam; Myoclonus; Piracetam; Prognosis

2009
Brivaracetam is superior to levetiracetam in a rat model of post-hypoxic myoclonus.
    Journal of neural transmission (Vienna, Austria : 1996), 2007, Volume: 114, Issue:12

    In the present study, we evaluated the anti-seizure and anti-myoclonic activity of levetiracetam and brivaracetam in an established rat model of cardiac arrest-induced post-hypoxic myoclonus. We found that brivaracetam (0.3 mg/kg, the minimal effective dose) was more potent than levetiracetam (3 mg/kg, the minimal effective dose) against post-hypoxic seizures. The anti-seizure activity of both compounds occurred 30 min following intraperitoneal (i.p.) administration and was maintained over the entire 150 min post-dose observation period. Both brivaracetam and levetiracetam significantly reduced auditory stimulated post-hypoxic myoclonus from a dose 0.3 mg/kg. At that dose, the anti-myoclonic activity of brivaracetam was already maximal whereas it continued to increase in a dose-relation manner with levetiracetam, suggesting that brivaracetam is a more potent agent. The onset and the duration of anti-myoclonic activity of both compounds were similar. These findings demonstrate that brivaracetam possesses more potent anti-seizure and anti-myoclonic activity than levetiracetam in an established rat model of cardiac arrest-induced post-hypoxic myoclonus.

    Topics: Animals; Anticonvulsants; Disease Models, Animal; Dose-Response Relationship, Drug; Epilepsies, Myoclonic; Heart Arrest; Hypoxia; Levetiracetam; Piracetam; Pyrrolidinones; Rats; Rats, Sprague-Dawley; Seizures

2007
Post-anoxic myoclonus: a case presentation and review of management in the rehabilitation setting.
    Brain injury, 2006, Volume: 20, Issue:2

    Post-anoxic myoclonus is a rare movement disorder manifested by diffuse action-triggered jerking movements that may result in significant disability. The incidence of this disorder is not clearly established, but over 122 cases have so far been reported in the literature. The pathogenesis is not entirely known, although it has been hypothesized that particular susceptibility of the Purkinje cells of cerebellum to anoxic injury may play a key role. A case is presented of an independently living 60-year-old woman admitted to the rehabilitation unit with diffuse myoclonus after sustaining a cardio-pulmonary arrest. She presented with severe jerking movements in all extremities with startle to noise and exacerbations upon attempting any purposeful actions. The patient's myoclonus was controlled by a variety of anti-epileptic medications. The patient initially responded to a combination of divalproex sodium and zonisamide, but relapsed in several weeks, requiring addition of levetriacetam and clonazepam. At a 1-year follow-up she demonstrated a significant improvement in ambulation and self-care activities. This case illustrates that, although patients with post-anoxic myoclonus cannot be fully cured, their quality of life can be significantly improved by rehabilitation interventions.

    Topics: Anticonvulsants; Clonazepam; Diazepam; Female; Heart Arrest; Humans; Hypoxia, Brain; Isoxazoles; Levetiracetam; Middle Aged; Myoclonus; Phenobarbital; Piracetam; Valproic Acid; Zonisamide

2006