Maturation of the ANS is accompanied by increasing HRV with a pronounced increase of parasympathetic activity. These changes are measurable by short-term recordings. The physiological pulses concerning baroreceptor reflex activity and respiratory modulation were similar in prematures and term infants.
Summary:Purpose: Valproic acid (VPA) is an antiepileptic drug (AED) commonly used for generalized and focal epilepsies. The clinical relevance of coagulopathies, known as side effects of VPA therapy, especially thrombocytopenia, von Willebrand disease, and a decrease of factor XIII, is still unclear.Methods: In our institute, we noticed a high incidence of clinically relevant coagulation problems related to VPA in eight patients within 1 year only and a further seven children with significant coagulopathy were identified in the context of planned surgery.
Results:We provide an overview of these patients and all six VPA-induced coagulopathies.Conclusions: At this time, it cannot be recommended to control all hemostatic parameters in every patient. Whenever an increased bleeding tendency is observed, or before surgical procedures, a platelet count, thrombelastography, prothrombin time, activated partial thromboplastin time, TT, fibrinogen, von Willibrand factor, and factor XIII should be examined. With 385 VPAtreated patients per year and 15 cases of coagulation disorders in this period, we estimate the incidence of coagulation disorders related to VPA in children to be nearly 4%.
The difference between 90 patients reported worldwide from 1979 to 2005 and the 16 new documented cases from only Germany over 10 years corroborates that the occurrence of this severe side effect is under reported.
Valproic acid (VPA) is a broad-spectrum antiepileptic drug and is usually well-tolerated. Rare serious complications may occur in some patients, including haemorrhagic pancreatitis, bone marrow suppression, VPA-induced hepatotoxicity and VPA-induced encephalopathy. The typical signs of VPA-induced encephalopathy are impaired consciousness, sometimes marked EEG background slowing, increased seizure frequency, with or without hyperammonemia. There is still no proof of causative effect of VPA in patients with encephalopathy, but only of an association with an assumed causal relation. We report 19 patients with VPA-associated encephalopathy in Germany from the years 1994 to 2003, none of whom had been published previously.
Summary:Purpose: Valproic acid (VPA) is an antiepileptic drug (AED) commonly used for generalized and focal epilepsies. We provide an update on hepatotoxic side effects in Germany between 1994 and 2003.Methods: We mailed a questionnaire to all members of the German Section of the International League Against Epilepsy, asking for VPA-induced side effects, especially severe side effects such as hepatopathy.
Reports have been published on blood coagulation disturbances by valproate therapy. In the present prospective trial, blood samples were drawn before valproate therapy, after 6 weeks of therapy, after more than 6 weeks and after longer than 6 months of valproate therapy from 23 children newly treated with valproate. Two children developed thrombocytopenia, and six children with initial normal von Willebrand factor showed acquired von Willebrand's disease. Fibrinogen levels dropped below the lower limit in 12 patients and subnormal factor XIII plasma levels were observed in 17% of patients. No patient developed signs of hemorrhage. Eight percent of patients developed valproate-induced thrombocytopenia. Reduction in platelets did not reach statistic significance. Thrombelastography showed a 47% incidence of altered platelet function. We found a statistically significant, positive correlation between clotting time of collagen extrinsic pathway inhibitor and, accordingly, adenosindiphosphate and valproate level. Plasmatic coagulation investigations showed a significant decrease of prothrombin time. Activated partial thromboplastin time measurements also showed significant prolongation with valproate. Activity of von Willebrand factor antigen and von Willebrand factor ristocetin cofactor significantly decreased. Factor XIII activity significantly decreased after valproate therapy for longer than 6 months (17% of children). Fibrinogen was significantly reduced. In the coagulatory system a decrease in the main antiprotease antithrombin III activity was observed. Blood coagulation disturbances are common in patients with valproate, but rarely become clinically symptomatic. Acquired von Willebrand's disease and hypofibrinogenemia may become relevant in patients with surgery or trauma. Particular attention should be paid to factor-XIII deficiency, which is especially seen with valproate therapy.
Ion channel proteins are required for both the establishment of resting membrane potentials and the generation of action potentials. Hundreds of mutations in genes encoding voltage-gated ion channels responsible for action potential generation have been found to cause severe neurological diseases. In contrast, the roles of voltage-independent "leak" channels, important for the establishment and maintenance of resting membrane potentials upon which action potentials are generated, are not well established in human disease. UNC80 is a large component of the NALCN sodium-leak channel complex that regulates the basal excitability of the nervous system. Loss-of-function mutations of NALCN cause infantile hypotonia with psychomotor retardation and characteristic facies (IHPRF). We report four individuals from three unrelated families who have homozygous missense or compound heterozygous truncating mutations in UNC80 and persistent hypotonia, encephalopathy, growth failure, and severe intellectual disability. Compared to control cells, HEK293T cells transfected with an expression plasmid containing the c.5098C>T (p.Pro1700Ser) UNC80 mutation found in one individual showed markedly decreased NALCN channel currents. Our findings demonstrate the fundamental significance of UNC80 and basal ionic conductance to human health.
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