Publication | Closed Access
Toxic Epidermal Necrolysis After Initiation of Felbamate Therapy
14
Citations
14
References
1995
Year
Toxic Epidermal NecrolysisMedicineFelbamate 3600PathologyPartial Complex SeizuresPoisoningToxicologyPharmacotherapySkin PharmacologyDermatologyPharmacologyDrug AllergyClinical Toxicology
A 33-year-old woman with a 13-year history of partial complex seizures experienced toxic epidermal necrolysis requiring management in a regional burn treatment center after 16 days of single-agent treatment for epilepsy with felbamate 3600 mg/day. Within 24 hours the target lesions involved 45% of her total body surface area. They coalesced and progressed to exfoliation involving the mucosa and the conjunctiva. The patient was hospitalized for 25 days. Reports in the literature describe life-threatening rashes after treatment with felbamate in combination with other anticonvulsant agents. We believe this to be the first reported case of felbamate-induced toxic epidermal necrolysis induced by single-agent therapy. Although felbamate provides many advantages as an anticonvulsant, its structure can be arranged to a conformation in space similar to that of hydantoins and barbiturates, and thus warrants careful patient monitoring for life-threatening rashes.
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