Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
2491114 Medical Hypotheses 2008 4 Pages PDF
Abstract

SummaryAs a common human disorder, epilepsy affects about 0.5% of the population. In many patients with epilepsy, seizures are well-controlled with currently available anti-epileptic drugs, but around 35% of patients with epilepsy continue to have seizures despite carefully optimized drug treatment. Recently, intrinsic or acquired overexpression of multidrug transporters in the blood–brain barrier has been suggested to result in producing pharmacoresistance in epilepsy, for anti-epileptic drugs concentrations would be reduced to the level that is insufficient to cause anti-epileptic activity. Intranasal administration provides a direct transport pathway to brain tissue that circumvents the blood–brain barrier for many drugs and neuropeptides. These significant conditions support the hypothesis that intranasal anticonvulsive treatment may be a prospective management of intractable epilepsy. Unfortunately, there are few studies on intranasal anticonvulsive treatment conducted in the field of intractable epilepsy. Our hypothesis provides not only a new alternative treatment for intractable epilepsy but also has potential for investigating the mechanisms underlying the development of pharmacoresistance in epilepsy.

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