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Valproic acid

Valproic acid or 2-Propylpentanoic acid is (CH3CH2CH2CH(CH2CH2CH3)COOH .

Sodium valproate (also known as Valproate, or VPA) is a sodium salt of valproic acid.

Divalproex Sodium, sold by Abbott Laboratories under the trade name of Depakote is the semisodium salt of valproic acid, made by combining sodium valproate with valproic acid to form a chemical complex which contains half the sodium of an equivalent dose of sodium valproate.

Valproic acid, delivered in either of these forms, is a anticonvulsant and mood-stabilizing drug used primarily in the treatment of epilepsy and bipolar disorder; but also used to treat migraine headaches and schizophrenia. In epileptics, valproic acid is used to control absence seizures, tonic-clonic seizures (grand mal), complex partial seizures, and the seizures associated with Lennox-Gastaut syndrome.

Valproate is believed to affect GABA receptors in the human brain.

Side Effects

Common side effects are dyspepsia and/or weight-gain. Less common are dizziness, drowsiness, hair-loss, headaches, nausea, sedation and tremors,

Valproic acid can also rarely cause blood dyscrasia, impaired liver function, jaundice, thrombocytopenia, and prolonged coagulation times. In ~5% of pregnant users, valproic acid will cross the placenta and cause congenital anomalies.

There have also been reports of cognitive dysfunction, Parkinsonian syndrome and even pseudoatrophic brain changes in long-term treatment with valproic acid.

Referenced By

Epilepsy | Epileptic seizure | Mood-stabilizing drug | Mood stabilisers | Mood stabilizer | Psychiatric medication | Psychopharmacological | Psychopharmacology | Seizure disorder

 

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This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Valproic acid".

 

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