Epilepsy is uncontrolled neuronal firing, so every antiepileptic drug does one of four things: damp sodium channels, damp calcium channels, boost GABA, or cut glutamate. Learn the four mechanisms below and you can place any drug — and predict the seizure type it treats.
Sodium-channel blockers
- Phenytoin — zero-order kinetics (small dose rise → big level jump), gum hypertrophy, hirsutism, enzyme inducer.
- Carbamazepine — drug of choice for focal seizures and trigeminal neuralgia; auto-induction, hyponatraemia, risk of SJS (check HLA-B*1502).
- Lamotrigine — broad-spectrum, well tolerated; titrate slowly to avoid rash.
Valproate — the broad-spectrum workhorse
Acts on sodium and calcium channels and enhances GABA — effective across seizure types. But: highly teratogenic (neural tube defects) — avoid in women of childbearing potential; also weight gain, tremor, hepatotoxicity.
Calcium-channel blockers (absence seizures)
Ethosuximide blocks T-type calcium channels in the thalamus — drug of choice for absence seizures. Valproate is the alternative (and preferred if generalised tonic-clonic seizures coexist).
GABA enhancers
- Benzodiazepines (lorazepam, diazepam) — first-line for status epilepticus.
- Phenobarbitone — effective but sedating; still used where resources are limited.
Newer broad-spectrum agents
Levetiracetam (binds SV2A) is increasingly first-line — few interactions, but mood/irritability effects. Topiramate and perampanel are useful add-ons.
Drug of choice — quick reference
- Focal seizures: carbamazepine / lamotrigine / levetiracetam.
- Generalised tonic-clonic: valproate (lamotrigine/levetiracetam in women).
- Absence: ethosuximide or valproate.
- Status epilepticus: IV benzodiazepine → then phenytoin/levetiracetam.
Exam tip: two high-yield safety points win marks every time — valproate is teratogenic (avoid in women of childbearing age) and ethosuximide is the drug of choice for absence seizures. Tie every drug back to a mechanism on the diagram.
Four mechanisms, a handful of first-choice drugs, and two safety red-flags — that framework will carry you through almost any antiepileptic question.
Test yourself
0 / 2A quick check on this topic — tap an answer for instant feedback.
Q1. Drug of choice for absence seizures:
Ethosuximide blocks T-type calcium channels in the thalamus — first choice for absence seizures.Q2. Which antiepileptic is the most strongly teratogenic?
Valproate causes neural-tube defects — avoid in women of childbearing potential.