The Effect of Antiepileptic Drug Therapy on Cognition in Drug-Responsive Mesial Temporal Lobe Epilepsy
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    Original Article
    P: 88-93
    August 2019

    The Effect of Antiepileptic Drug Therapy on Cognition in Drug-Responsive Mesial Temporal Lobe Epilepsy

    Arch Epilepsy 2019;25(2):88-93
    1. Antalya Training and Research Hospital, Department of Neurology, Antalya, Turkey
    2. Samsun Training and Research Hospital, Department of Neurology, Samsun, Turkey
    3. Clinic of Neurology, Bakırköy Mental and Neurological Diseases Training and Research Hospital, Istanbul, Turkey
    4. Bakırköy Mental and Neurological Diseases Training and Research Hospital, Neuropsychology, İstanbul
    No information available.
    No information available
    Received Date: 10.11.2018
    Accepted Date: 18.12.2018
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    ABSTRACT

    Objectives:

    The aim of this study was to examine the effect of antiepileptic drugs on memory and executive functions in drug-responsive mesial temporal lobe epilepsy with unilateral hippocampal sclerosis (MTLE-HS).

    Methods:

    The patients were classified according to the 2017 International League Against Epilepsy classification of seizures. Thirty-four patients with the diagnosis of MTLE-HS and 30 matched controls were enrolled. Patients treated with a maximum 2 anti-epileptic drugs and experiencing no more than 2 instances of focal impaired awareness per month or 2 focal to bilateral tonic-clonic seizures in a year were accepted as drug-responsive. Patients receiving monotherapy (PRM) and polytherapy (PRP) were compared in terms of memory and executive functions.

    Results:

    There were 19 (55.8%) monotherapy patients in the group and 15 (44.2%) polytherapy patients. The maximum number of learned words recorded in a verbal memory test, the immediate and delayed recall score, and the logical memory score were all statistically significantly lower in the PRP group compared with the PRM group (p<0.05). The results of the verbal attention test and verbal fluency test were also significantly lower in the PRP group (p<0.01).

    Conclusion:

    Significantly greater impairment was observed in several aspects of cognitive function in the PRP group. These results indicate that antiepileptic drugs may have a negative impact on cognition.

    Keywords: Antiepileptic drugs, epilepsy, drug responsiveness, mesial temporal lobe epilepsy

    References

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