Journal article
Lamotrigine in epilepsy, pregnancy and psychiatry-a drug for all seasons?
FJE Vajda, S Dodd, D Horgan
Journal of Clinical Neuroscience | Published : 2013
Abstract
Lamotrigine has been demonstrated to be effective as both an antiepileptic drug and a mood stabiliser. For epilepsy it is less efficacious than valproate in primary generalised epilepsy, but it is comparable to some traditional drugs in partial epilepsy. In psychiatry it has significant advantages over other mood stabilisers for the treatment and prevention of depressive phases of bipolar illness, but not for the treatment of mania. It has a more benign adverse effect profile than older antiepileptic agents and is not a proven teratogen. Risk of adverse reactions is reduced by commencing treatment at a markedly reduced dose that is gradually increased. © 2012 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserve..
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Funding Acknowledgements
S.D. has received grant/research support from the Stanley Medical Research Institute, NHMRC, Beyond Blue, ARHRF, Simons Foundation, Geelong Medical Research Foundation, Eli Lilly, GlaxoSmithlthne, Organon, Mayne Pharma and Servier, speaker's fees and advisory board fees from Eli Lilly and conference travel support from Servier.