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Publication Date: 09 Jul 2009
Type: Review
Journal: Clinical Medicine Insights: Therapeutics
Lamotrigine is an oral well absorbed antiepileptic medication (AED) from the phenyltriazine class approved by the FDA in 1994 for the treatment of epilepsy and in 2003 for the treatment of bipolar disorder. For epilepsy it is used to treat partial seizures, primary and secondary tonic–clonic seizures, and seizures associated with Lennox-Gastaut syndrome. Lamotrigine is the only AED that treats the depressive as well as the maniac phases of bipolar disorders. It is important to consider lamotrigine adverse reactions and drug-drug interactions such as with other AED’s, psychiatric medications, estrogens, and complementary-alternative medicines. Lamotrigine induces skin reactions as part of the hypersensitivity response (HSR), the actual incidence of skin rash is low (1.8%) providing slow escalation regimens are used when introducing this medication. An especially appealing indication for lamotrigine treatment is elderly epilepsy with depression. The main advantage of lamotrigine for the treatment of this indication in the elderly lies in its favorable and predictive adverse event profile and drug-drug interactions in comparison to other AEDs. Lamotrigine can serve in the elderly as both an antiepileptic and an antidepressant drug with a relatively favorable profile.
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