Hi friends;
as you know i'm waiting for the Switzerland appointment with Dr. Jeanmonod.
Waiting for it, my tinnitus and headache are out of control, and my neurologist keep me on Keppra (Levetiracetam). This is an anti-seizure drugs with a potential act on potassium channel without the serious side effect that i have experienced with Retigabine (Trobalt) and Flupirtine (Efiret).
I'm on first day, I'll update you.
Has anyone tried it?
I have also found this paper: http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S002839080300248X
Reduction of voltage-operated potassium currents by levetiracetam: a novel antiepileptic mechanism of action?
Abstract
Levetiracetam (ucb L059; Keppra™) is a novel antiepileptic drug. Its effects on action potential generation and voltage-operated potassium currents were studied in acutely isolated hippocampal CA1 neurones from rat and guinea pig, using the patch-clamp technique in the whole-cell configuration. (i) Levetiracetam reduced repetitive action potential generation and affected the single action potential. Levetiracetam, 100 μM, decreased the total number of action potentials and reduced the total depolarisation area of repetitive action potentials by 21%. Furthermore, levetiracetam increased the duration of the first action potential slightly, prolonged that of the second action potential by 13% and decreased the slope of rise by 23%. (ii) Levetiracetam decreased the voltage-operated potassium current. Without effect on sodium and A-type potassium currents, levetiracetam, 100 μM, reduced the delayed rectifier current by 26%. The concentration of half-maximal block was 47 μM for guinea pig and 6 μM for rat neurones. Thus, the reduction of repetitive action potential generation by levetiracetam can be attributed, unexpectedly, to a moderate reduction of the delayed rectifier potassium current, as supported by a simulation of action potential generation. This suggests that a reduction of potassium currents may contribute to the antiepileptic effect(s) of levetiracetam.
Best wishes
as you know i'm waiting for the Switzerland appointment with Dr. Jeanmonod.
Waiting for it, my tinnitus and headache are out of control, and my neurologist keep me on Keppra (Levetiracetam). This is an anti-seizure drugs with a potential act on potassium channel without the serious side effect that i have experienced with Retigabine (Trobalt) and Flupirtine (Efiret).
I'm on first day, I'll update you.
Has anyone tried it?
I have also found this paper: http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S002839080300248X
Reduction of voltage-operated potassium currents by levetiracetam: a novel antiepileptic mechanism of action?
Abstract
Levetiracetam (ucb L059; Keppra™) is a novel antiepileptic drug. Its effects on action potential generation and voltage-operated potassium currents were studied in acutely isolated hippocampal CA1 neurones from rat and guinea pig, using the patch-clamp technique in the whole-cell configuration. (i) Levetiracetam reduced repetitive action potential generation and affected the single action potential. Levetiracetam, 100 μM, decreased the total number of action potentials and reduced the total depolarisation area of repetitive action potentials by 21%. Furthermore, levetiracetam increased the duration of the first action potential slightly, prolonged that of the second action potential by 13% and decreased the slope of rise by 23%. (ii) Levetiracetam decreased the voltage-operated potassium current. Without effect on sodium and A-type potassium currents, levetiracetam, 100 μM, reduced the delayed rectifier current by 26%. The concentration of half-maximal block was 47 μM for guinea pig and 6 μM for rat neurones. Thus, the reduction of repetitive action potential generation by levetiracetam can be attributed, unexpectedly, to a moderate reduction of the delayed rectifier potassium current, as supported by a simulation of action potential generation. This suggests that a reduction of potassium currents may contribute to the antiepileptic effect(s) of levetiracetam.
Best wishes