Elsevier

Seizure

Volume 12, Issue 5, July 2003, Pages 316-318
Seizure

SHORT COMMUNICATION
The anticonvulsant effect of citalopram as an indirect evidence of serotonergic impairment in human epileptogenesis

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Abstract

Some evidence would indicate that a serotonergic deficit may be involved in epileptogenesis. A preliminary trial of citalopram, a selective inhibitor of serotonin reuptake, was carried out. Citalopram 20 mg/day was given to 11 non-depressed patients with poorly controlled epilepsy as an add on treatment with an open label design for 8–10 months. The median seizure frequency dropped by 55.6% in the whole group, with nine patients improving by at least 50%. No adverse reactions occurred with the exception of mild drowsiness. There were no changes of post-treatment as compared to pre-treatment AED serum concentrations. Although controlled studies are required to confirm the anticonvulsant effect of citalopram, these findings may be regarded as an indirect evidence of serotonergic impairment in human epileptogenesis.

Keywords

epileptogenesis
5-HTP
allopregnanolone

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