Showing posts with label Epilepsy Drugs. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Epilepsy Drugs. Show all posts

If you use a drug to guard your wellbeing against epilepsy during pregnancy, you might be putting your future child’s wellness at risk. This is according to a new study published in the Journal of the American Medical Association, which has suggested that one in 20 children whose mothers used the drug valproate to treat epilepsy during pregnancy suffers from an autistic disorder.


The study involved 655,615 children born between 1996 and 2006, noting that 4.42% of those whose mothers used valproate while pregnant were diagnosed with an autism-spectrum disorder, and 2.5% were found to have childhood autism. An autism-spectrum disorder, which can range from mild to more severe forms, affects the mental health of an estimated one in 100 people in the UK.


However, the researchers noted that drugs to treat epilepsy are important for controlling the condition in pregnancy, and so urged for more studies to back up their findings. The drug they focused on was valproate, which is used to other neuro-psychological disorders, as well as epilepsy. The researchers commented, ‘Anti-epileptic drug exposure during pregnancy has been associated with an increased risk for congenital malformations and delayed cognitive development in the offspring, but little is known about the risk of other serious neuropsychiatric disorders.’


Led by Jakob Christensen, the researchers from Aarhus University Hospital in Denmark used national registers to identify children exposed to valproate during pregnancy and diagnosed with autism-spectrum disorders, including Asperger’s syndrome. Of the 5,437 children were diagnosed with autism-spectrum disorder, the researchers identified 2,644 children exposed to anti-epileptic drugs during pregnancy, 508 of whom were exposed to valproate.


The researchers explained, ‘Because autism-spectrum disorders are serious conditions with lifelong implications for affected children and their families, even a moderate increase in risk may have major health importance. Still, the absolute risk of autism-spectrum disorder was less than 5 per cent, which is important to take into account when counselling women about the use of valproate in pregnancy.’


The researchers also warned that this finding should be balanced against the benefits of valproate for epilepsy control. According to Dr Robert Moffat, national director of the National Autistic Society Scotland, ‘The causes of autism are complex and are still being investigated. We therefore urge people not to jump to conclusions about this study and its implications. It’s important that anyone who does have concerns about their medication seeks advice from an appropriate medical professional.’



Could Epilepsy Drugs During Pregnancy Cause Child Autism?

pregnancy mythsA study has found that a drug taken by women whose wellness is affected by epilepsy could affect their baby’s cognitive wellbeing. According to the US researchers, the epilepsy medication, valproate, has a long-term impact on children’s IQ.


In 2009, a group of three-year-olds, whose mothers had taken valproate during pregnancy, were found to have below-par cognitive skills. This led the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) to issue a warning about gestational use of the drug. More recently, researchers in the United States have carried out follow-up tests among the same group of children, now at the age of six, the results of which have been published in the journal The Lancet Neurology.


The new study found that children born to mothers who had used valproate in pregnancy had an IQ that was seven to 10 points lower than children whose mothers had used one of three other epilepsy drugs; carbamazepine, lamotrigine, and phenytoin. Valproate also affected child verbal and memory skills, and the higher the dosage take, the greater the IQ discrepancy.


However, if your infant has been exposed to any of these drugs, it doesn’t mean that that you’ve failed at family wellness before you’ve even begun. The study also found that child IQ may improve with age, and if expectant mothers also take folic acid supplements. This is an important discovery, because valproate is, for some people, the only drug that can control their epilepsy.


According to Kimford Meador at Emory University in Atlanta, Georgia, ‘Valproate usage during pregnancy has a significant negative effect on children’s IQ, which lasts beyond their earliest years. IQ at age six is strongly predictive of adult IQ and school performance, so our research suggests that valproate use during pregnancy is likely to have long-term negative effects on a child’s IQ and other cognitive abilities.


Meador concluded by saying, ‘For many antiepileptic drugs, there is simply no research available on their effects on women and their children during pregnancy, and given that many women do not have the option of stopping medication during pregnancy, more research in this area is urgently needed.’



Why are Epilepsy Drugs during Pregnancy bad for Baby’s IQ?

pregnancy mythsA study has found that a drug taken by women whose wellness is affected by epilepsy could affect their baby’s cognitive wellbeing. According to the US researchers, the epilepsy medication, valproate, has a long-term impact on children’s IQ.


In 2009, a group of three-year-olds, whose mothers had taken valproate during pregnancy, were found to have below-par cognitive skills. This led the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) to issue a warning about gestational use of the drug. More recently, researchers in the United States have carried out follow-up tests among the same group of children, now at the age of six, the results of which have been published in the journal The Lancet Neurology.


The new study found that children born to mothers who had used valproate in pregnancy had an IQ that was seven to 10 points lower than children whose mothers had used one of three other epilepsy drugs; carbamazepine, lamotrigine, and phenytoin. Valproate also affected child verbal and memory skills, and the higher the dosage take, the greater the IQ discrepancy.


However, if your infant has been exposed to any of these drugs, it doesn’t mean that that you’ve failed at family wellness before you’ve even begun. The study also found that child IQ may improve with age, and if expectant mothers also take folic acid supplements. This is an important discovery, because valproate is, for some people, the only drug that can control their epilepsy.


According to Kimford Meador at Emory University in Atlanta, Georgia, ‘Valproate usage during pregnancy has a significant negative effect on children’s IQ, which lasts beyond their earliest years. IQ at age six is strongly predictive of adult IQ and school performance, so our research suggests that valproate use during pregnancy is likely to have long-term negative effects on a child’s IQ and other cognitive abilities.


Meador concluded by saying, ‘For many antiepileptic drugs, there is simply no research available on their effects on women and their children during pregnancy, and given that many women do not have the option of stopping medication during pregnancy, more research in this area is urgently needed.’



Why are Epilepsy Drugs during Pregnancy bad for Baby’s IQ?