Guest guest Posted April 12, 2004 Report Share Posted April 12, 2004 The main problems that seem to lead to seizures increasing rather than decreasing on the diet from what I have gathered are either from a) an underlying (so undiagnosed) metabolic problem - usually along fatty oxidation lines, but this one is pretty rare...oh, that includes carnitine deficiency btw.. a food intolerance/allergy of some sort (like for example if not a lot of dairy was consumed prior to the diet, and a heap of say cream is then eaten to boost the fat content of a keto meal, this can trigger a response, this happened with cheese with my son, but there were other signs in him as well, mainly spots appearing on his face) c) excess ketosis - usually the problem here is the kiddie going too acidotic which can cause seizures, but also a 'ketone' toxicity with or without accompanying excess acidity has been described as well, d) hypoglycemia and e) most commonly - med toxicity. The state of ketosis can alter the way the meds are metabolised, so even if blood levels show no change, how they affect the child can still differ. There is brief mention made of this in Dr Freeman's book, outlining the reason why - to do with the protein binding mechanism of the AEDs, or something along those lines (sorry to be so vague - I don't have my book handy..., and if this does happen, it seems the higher the ketones, the more impact the med will have. Like when was very toxic, he was prone to toxicity induced seizures after his evening meds - as they peaked his ketones levels were at their highest, result was overload and seizures. But after a while he got back into seizure mode fullstop (seizures begetting more seizures, and then the pattern to the seizures was less definitive). The only way to combat this with him was to do some rapid med weans. There doesn't seem to be any one AED that doesn't have the potential to turn toxic, but the benzos and barbiturates are the ones more commonly documented to do this. Personally, we have had trouble with lamictal, depakote and the benzodiazepines (klonipin is another in the benzodiazepine class of meds) in particular as far as toxicity goes. He is now on a low dose of depakote (500 mgs, 18 mgs per kg, and we now split it 3 times in a 24 hr period, meaning having to give him a dose in the night, but this seems the only way he can handle the total dose without seeing toxicity in him as the doses peak) as well as low dose topomax (150 mgs, so 5.5 mgs per kg). Touch wood - we have finally lost the toxicity that plagued him for the first 2 yrs of being on the diet, and he has been seizure free on this regime for nearly 4 mths now. ----- Original Message ----- > has been on the diet for 3 weeks now. Before starting the > diet, he was having 8 to 12 seizures per day. Now he is having over > 30+. His urine ketone level vary from small to large throughout the > day. Blood sugar are between 75 to 93 using one touch ultra > glucometer, which has a 1 to 20% variances from hospital glucometer. > Could his increase seizure acivity due to medication toxicity? He > is on Klonopin 1.725 mg/day; Lamictal on 50mg/day. Has anyone heard > of med toxicity with klonopin or lamictal?? > He is about 19 lbs and is 9months old. > I had posed this question to his neurologist and he recommeds we > stop the diet. I am really reluctant to stop the diet because we > see this diet as our last hope. Giving up this diet is like giving > up any hope that my son will ever get better. > > greatly appreciate your response in advance. > -kieu (kyle's mom). Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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