1. Carbonic anhydrase-inhibiting medications and the intracarotid amobarbital procedure in children
- Author
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Ashley N. Pettoni, Megan L. McCormick, J. Robert Flamini, Thomas G. Burns, Morris R. Cohen, and Gregory P. Lee
- Subjects
Male ,genetic structures ,Adolescent ,Amobarbital ,Functional Laterality ,Behavioral Neuroscience ,Epilepsy ,Memory ,medicine ,Humans ,Epilepsy surgery ,Anesthesia ,Carbonic Anhydrase Inhibitors ,Child ,Retrospective Studies ,Pediatric epilepsy ,Sodium Amobarbital ,business.industry ,Age Factors ,Retrospective cohort study ,medicine.disease ,Neurology ,Multicenter study ,Anticonvulsants ,Female ,sense organs ,Neurology (clinical) ,business ,medicine.drug - Abstract
The intracarotid amobarbital procedure (IAP) is routinely conducted as part of the presurgical evaluation of pediatric patients with epilepsy. The aim of the present study was to investigate the possibility that anesthetization failures are the result of interactions of carbonic anhydrase-inhibiting (CAI) medications with sodium amobarbital. An archival review of 81 cases conducted between 1999 and 2008 was performed across two pediatric epilepsy centers. chi(2) analysis was used to assess whether CAI medications interfered with the outcome of these procedures. Of 81 patients, 85.2% had conclusive findings. All of the remaining 14.8% with anesthetization failures were taking CAI medications at the time of the procedure. However, 53.8% of patients taking CAI medications had conclusive results. This suggests that these medications may interact with sodium amobarbital, raising the possibility of anesthetization failures in children prescribed CAI medications.
- Published
- 2008