Journal Article10.1001/ARCHNEUR.1981.00510030034003
Teratogenic effects of anticonvulsants.
75
TL;DR: The incidence of malformations in fetal mice exposed to phenytoin depends on drug dosage and the strain of mice, and human maternal exposure to anticonvulsants may increase infant clefting by threefold to tenfold.
read more
Abstract: • The incidence of malformations in fetal mice exposed to phenytoin depends on drug dosage and the strain of mice. Animal research also suggests that most anticonvulsants are teratogenic in experimental animals when large doses are used, but the effect of valproate sodium on the fetus is poorly known. Cleft lip and palatal defects have been most extensively studied, but defects have also been noted in eyes, heart, and limb buds. Data from humans are less clear than the animal data, but human maternal exposure to anticonvulsants may increase infant clefting by threefold to tenfold. If a woman at risk for childbearing is given anticonvulsants for the first time, carbamazepine may be given first. Before pregnancy, the true need for anticonvulsants should be reassessed, but abrupt discontinuation of anticonvulsants during pregnancy is not now recommended.
read more
Chat with Paper
AI Agents for this Paper
Find similar papers on Google Scholar, PubMed and Arxiv
Write a critical review of this paper
Analyze citations of this paper to find unaddressed research gaps
Citations
ACOG practice bulletin: Clinical management guidelines for obstetrician-gynecologists
TL;DR: Maternal mortality from postpartum obstetric hemorrhage has decreased since the late 1980s and accounted for slightly more than 10% of maternal mortalities in 2009 and is associated with increasing rates of transfusion and peripartum hysterectomy.
1.2K
Multi‐institutional Study on the Teratogenicity and Fetal Toxicity of Antiepileptic Drugs: A Report of a Collaborative Study Group in Japan
Yoshibumi Nakane,Teruo Okuma,Ryo Takahashi,Yorio Sato,Toyoji Wada,Tokijiro Sato,Yutaka Fukushima,Hisashi Kumashiro,Tsuneo Ono,Takeo Takahashi,Yasunori Aoki,Hajime Kazamatsuri,Masaaki Inami,Sumiya Komai,Masakazu Seino,Masako Miyakoshi,Takashi Tanimura,Hidebumi Hazama,Ryuzo Kawahara,Saburo Otsuki,Kiyoshi Hosokawa,Kazutoyo Inanaga,Yoichi Nakazawa,Koichi Yamamoto +23 more
TL;DR: It is presumed on the basis of the results of analysis of the data that a combination of more than three drugs and a daily dose greater than a certain minimal level is likely to produce malformed infants.
273
Congenital heart disease in relation to maternal use of Bendectin and other drugs in early pregnancy
Sally Zierler,Kenneth J. Rothman +1 more
TL;DR: The data from this study were consistent with previously reported associations of other drugs with congenital heart disease, and aspirin use in early pregnancy was associated with about a twofold increase in the frequency of defects in septation of the truncus arteriosus.
149
Congenital heart disease and extracardiac anomalies: Associations and indications for fetal echocardiography
TL;DR: Maternal diabetes and phenylketonuria, as well as exposure to phenytoin, trimethadione, or isotretinoin, may result in multiple systemic defects, including congenital heart disease, which may have important implications for obstetric and neonatal management.
134
Non‐Dose‐Related Side Effects of Valproate
TL;DR: The clinical and histological findings in 88 patients in whom hepatotoxicity with valproate has been reported were reviewed.
107
References
Risks to the offspring of women treated with hydantoin anticonvulsants, with emphasis on the fetal hydantoin syndrome
James W. Hanson,James W. Hanson,Ntinos C. Myrianthopoulos,Ntinos C. Myrianthopoulos,Mary Ann Sedgwick Harvey,Mary Ann Sedgwick Harvey,David Smith,David Smith +7 more
TL;DR: Women being treated with hydantoin anticonvulsants should be told of the nature and magnitude of risks to the developing fetus before considering a pregnancy.
432
Maternal epilepsy and abnormalities of the fetus and newborn.
B.D. Speidel,S.R. Meadow +1 more
TL;DR: It is shown that major congenital malformations occurred in their children with twice the expected frequency, and, while anticonvulsant drugs may have a teratogenic action mediated by interference with folic-acid metabolism, suchTeratogenic activity is likely to be influenced by hereditary and environmental factors.
428
Anticonvulsant drugs and congenital abnormalities
TL;DR: Sir, I should be interested to know if your readers have seen babies with hare-lip, cleft palate, and certain other specific abnormalities born to mothers who receive regular anticonvulsant therapy.
275
Infants exposed in utero to antiepileptic drugs. A prospective study
TL;DR: Twenty-eight newly born infants exposed in utero to various anticonvulsant drugs have been followed up from birth to 36 months of age, and their clinical status has been compared to that of 165 infants not exposed to these agents.
212
Related Papers (5)
Yoshibumi Nakane,Teruo Okuma,Ryo Takahashi,Yorio Sato,Toyoji Wada,Tokijiro Sato,Yutaka Fukushima,Hisashi Kumashiro,Tsuneo Ono,Takeo Takahashi,Yasunori Aoki,Hajime Kazamatsuri,Masaaki Inami,Sumiya Komai,Masakazu Seino,Masako Miyakoshi,Takashi Tanimura,Hidebumi Hazama,Ryuzo Kawahara,Saburo Otsuki,Kiyoshi Hosokawa,Kazutoyo Inanaga,Yoichi Nakazawa,Koichi Yamamoto +23 more
B.D. Speidel,S.R. Meadow +1 more