Publication | Closed Access
Clinical and Electroencephalographic Correlations with Serum Levels of Diphenylhydantoin
276
Citations
6
References
1960
Year
Serum DiphenylhydantoinNeurophysiological BiomarkersNeuropsychiatryPharmacotherapyExperimental PharmacologySocial SciencesDrug MonitoringToxicologyNeurologyClinical ChemistrySerum LevelsTherapeutic Drug MonitoringUniversity HospitalNeuropharmacologyPharmacologyNeurological AssessmentSide EffectNeurophysiologyForensic ToxicologyClinical PharmacologyDaily FluctuationsBrain ElectrophysiologyNeuroscienceMedicinePharmacokineticsAnesthesiologyDrug Analysis
In a previous study<sup>2</sup>a method was described for determining diphenylhydantoin (5,5-diphenylhydantoin; phenytoin; Dilantin) concentrations in the serum when the drug was given in therapeutic amounts. With this method were determined the rate of rise of diphenylhydantoin in the serum after oral and after intravenous administration, the hourly and daily fluctuations, the ratio of dosage to serum level, and the rate of fall of serum diphenylhydantoin after withdrawal of the drug. In the study presented in this report the correlation is described between the serum level of diphenylhydantoin and the anticonvulsant effect of the drug, the incidence of paroxysmal abnormalities in the electroencephalogram, and the occurrence of toxic side-effects. <h3>Patients and Methods</h3><h3>Patients.</h3> —1. Twelve patients, 19 to 58 years of age—six men and six women, hospitalized in the neuromedical, neurosurgical, or psychiatric department of the University Hospital. They had not taken diphenylhydantoin before admission to the hospital and
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1