Revista de Neurologia 2008-01-01

[Rufinamide. A review of its pharmacokinetic and pharmacodynamic properties].

J L Herranz

Index: Rev. Neurol. 47(7) , 369-73, (2008)

Full Text: HTML

Abstract

To review the most important research published on the pharmacokinetic and pharmacodynamic properties of rufinamide (RFM), together with the outcomes of the clinical trials conducted to date with this new antiepileptic drug.RFM is a triazole derivative with no structural relation to the other antiepileptic drugs, and the effectiveness and safety profiles shown in laboratory animals suggest that it could be effective in the treatment of partial and generalised seizures. In fact, in double-blind trials RFM has proved to be effective and well tolerated in adults with intractable partial seizures and in patients between 4 and 30 years of age with Lennox-Gastaut syndrome.Based on the results of clinical trials, RFM has been approved in the European Union for specific use in patients with Lennox-Gastaut syndrome and therefore represents a new therapeutic alternative with which to offset the medication resistance of this epileptic encephalopathy.


Related Compounds

Related Articles:

Dose-dependent pharmacokinetics and brain penetration of rufinamide following intravenous and oral administration to rats.

2015-02-20

[Eur. J. Pharm. Sci. 68 , 106-13, (2015)]

Toxicological screening of human plasma by on-line SPE-HPLC-DAD: identification and quantification of basic drugs and metabolites.

2015-06-01

[Biomed. Chromatogr. 29 , 935-52, (2015)]

Rufinamide for the treatment of Lennox-Gastaut syndrome.

2011-04-01

[Expert Opin. Pharmacother. 12(5) , 801-6, (2011)]

Treatment of malignant migrating partial epilepsy of infancy with rufinamide: report of five cases.

2011-03-01

[Epileptic Disord. 13(1) , 18-21, (2011)]

Bioavailability of three rufinamide oral suspensions compared with the marketed 400-mg tablet formulation: results from a randomized-sequence, open-label, four-period, four-sequence crossover study in healthy subjects.

2011-01-01

[Clin. Ther. 33(1) , 146-57, (2011)]

More Articles...