PURPOSE: Data from the literature suggest that long-term therapy with various antiepileptic drugs can be responsible for the functional disturbances within the nervous system e.g. peripheral neuropathy and encephalopathy. Useful and non-invasive instruments for evaluation of even subclinical nerve conduction abnormalities in somatosensory tracts are somatosensory evoked potentials (SEPs). The aim of this study was to assess the potentially drug-induced abnormalities in the SEP parameters in epileptic children, treated chronically in monotherapy with one of the two most often used antiepileptic drugs: valproate (VPA) or carbamazepine (CBZ). MATERIALS AND METHODS: SEP from left median nerve stimulation were recorded in twenty children with idiopathic/cryptogenic epilepsy treated in monotherapy with CBZ (9 patients) or VPA (11 patients). The mean age of the patients was 13.4 ± 2.9 years (range 7-17 years). The plasma concentrations of the drugs were consistently within therapeutic range. The mean duration of treatment was eight months. The control group consisted of twenty-four age-matched children with tension type headache. The latencies of the components: N9, N13, N20, P25 and the peripheral conduction time (PCT) and central conduction time (CCT) were analyzed. RESULTS: No significant differences in all analyzed SEP parameters between the epileptic and control children were found. CONCLUSIONS: Our results indicate that during the first 8 months from the beginning of antiepileptic treatment in children, monotherapy with VPA or CBZ does not induce nerve conduction disturbances within both the peripheral- and the central part of the somatosensory tracts, detected in SEP examination.
PURPOSE: Data from the literature suggest that long-term therapy with various antiepileptic drugs can be responsible for the functional disturbances within the nervous system e.g. peripheral neuropathy and encephalopathy. Useful and non-invasive instruments for evaluation of even subclinical nerve conduction abnormalities in somatosensory tracts are somatosensory evoked potentials (SEPs). The aim of this study was to assess the potentially drug-induced abnormalities in the SEP parameters in epilepticchildren, treated chronically in monotherapy with one of the two most often used antiepileptic drugs: valproate (VPA) or carbamazepine (CBZ). MATERIALS AND METHODS: SEP from left median nerve stimulation were recorded in twenty children with idiopathic/cryptogenic epilepsy treated in monotherapy with CBZ (9 patients) or VPA (11 patients). The mean age of the patients was 13.4 ± 2.9 years (range 7-17 years). The plasma concentrations of the drugs were consistently within therapeutic range. The mean duration of treatment was eight months. The control group consisted of twenty-four age-matched children with tension type headache. The latencies of the components: N9, N13, N20, P25 and the peripheral conduction time (PCT) and central conduction time (CCT) were analyzed. RESULTS: No significant differences in all analyzed SEP parameters between the epileptic and control children were found. CONCLUSIONS: Our results indicate that during the first 8 months from the beginning of antiepileptic treatment in children, monotherapy with VPA or CBZ does not induce nerve conduction disturbances within both the peripheral- and the central part of the somatosensory tracts, detected in SEP examination.