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Acetazolamide is a heterocyclic sulfonamide and carbonic anhydrase-inhibiting drug primarily used to treat glaucoma. It also has applications in the management of various types of seizures.
Authorized Indications
- UK-SmPC:
- Second-line drug for tonic-clonic and focal seizures.
- Occasionally helpful in atypical absence, atonic, and tonic seizures.
- FDA-PI:
- Adjunctive treatment of centrencephalic epilepsies (petit mal, unlocalized seizures).
Clinical Applications
- Limited use as an adjunctive therapy for various seizures, mainly absences.
- Controls myoclonic jerks, generalized tonic-clonic seizures (GTCS), and focal seizures.
- Used for intermittent administration in catamenial epilepsy (5 days before expected menses onset until termination of bleeding).
- Not recommended if there is a likelihood of pregnancy.
Dosage and Titration
- Adults:
- Start with 250 mg.
- Increase to 500–750 mg.
- Children:
- 10–20 mg/day.
- Dosing:
- Two or three times daily.
- Therapeutic drug monitoring (TDM) is not needed.
- Reference range: 10–14 mg/l (400–700 μmol/l).
Main Adverse Drug Reactions (ADRs)
- Frequent/Important:
- Flushing, lethargy, anorexia, nausea, vomiting, paraesthesiae, increased diuresis.
- Serious:
- Idiosyncratic reactions: rash, aplastic anemia, Stevens-Johnson syndrome.
- Renal failure, nephrolithiasis with chronic treatment.
- Metabolic acidosis, as with other carbonic anhydrase inhibitors.
Mechanism of Action
- Inhibits carbonic anhydrase, which catalyzes the hydration of CO2 and dehydration of carbonic acid.
- Blocks brain carbonic anhydrase, increasing intracellular CO2, decreasing intracellular pH, and depressing neuronal activity.
Pharmacokinetics
- Oral Bioavailability: >90%
- Protein Binding: 90–95%
- Metabolism: Does not undergo metabolic alteration.
- Excretion: Renal.
- Elimination Half-life: 12–14 hours.
Drug Interactions
- Not Significant:
- Reduces carbamazepine levels.
- Salicylates increase acetazolamide levels due to competition at the renal tubule for secretion.
Main Disadvantages
- Unpredictable seizure efficacy.
- Development of tolerance.
- Idiosyncratic reactions that may be fatal.
Useful Clinical Notes
- Risk of withdrawal seizures.
- Combination with carbamazepine or oxcarbazepine increases the risk of hyponatremia.
- Avoid concurrent use with other carbonic anhydrase inhibitors (e.g., sulthiame, topiramate, zonisamide).
- Withdraw before starting a ketogenic diet.
- Concurrent use with aspirin can lead to high plasma concentrations of acetazolamide and toxicity.
References
- Panayiotopoulos CP (2001). Treatment of typical absence seizures and related epileptic syndromes. Paediatr Drugs, 3(5), 379-403. PMID: 11393330.
- Lim LL, Foldvary N, Mascha E, Lee J (2001). Acetazolamide in women with catamenial epilepsy. Epilepsia, 42(6), 746-749. PMID: 11422329.
Cite this: ICNApedia contributors.Acetazolamide . ICNApedia, The Child Neurology Knowledge Environment. 21 November 2024. Available at: https://icnapedia.org/knowledgebase/articles/acetazolamide Accessed 21 November 2024.