Carbamazepine chemical structure
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Carbatrol

Carbamazepine (sold under the brand-names Biston®, Calepsin®, Carbatrol®, Epitol®, Equetro®, Finlepsin®, Sirtal®, Stazepine®, Tegretol®, Telesmin®, Timonil®) is an anticonvulsant and mood stabilizing drug, used primarily in the treatment of epilepsy and bipolar disorder. It is also used to treat schizophrenia and trigeminal neuralgia. more...

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Mechanisms

Carbamazepine and its derivatives' action mechanism is not well understood, but appears to be primarily through the inhibition of sodium channel activity.

Side-effects

Carbamazepine renders birth control pills ineffective.

Common side-effects include drowsiness, motor-coordination impairment and/or upset stomach. Taken every twelve hours, the Tegretol XR® or Carbatrol® preparations can greatly increase tolerability.

Less common side-effects include blurry or double vision and/or the temporary or mild loss of blood cells or platelets. In rare cases the latter can be life-threatening if unnoticed, so frequent blood tests are required during the first few months' use, followed by three or four tests per year. There are also reports of a bizarre auditory side-effect, whereby patients perceive musical notes about a semitone lower than their actual pitch (so middle C would be heard as the note B3 just below it, etc).

Oxcarbazepine, a derivative of carbamazepine, has fewer and less serious side-effects.

History

Carbamazepine was discovered by chemist Walter Schindler at J.R. Geigy AG (now part of Novartis) in Basel, Switzerland, in 1953. Schindler then synthesized the drug in 1960, before its anti-epileptic properties had been discovered.

Carbamazepine was first marketed as a drug to treat trigeminal neuralgia in 1962. It has been used as an anticonvulsant in the UK since 1965, but only approved in the U.S. since 1974.

Read more at Wikipedia.org


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Shire Pharmaceuticals Group PLC to buy BioChem Pharma Inc. for 20.98 times revenue
From Weekly Corporate Growth Report, 12/18/00

The Deal: Shire Pharmaceuticals Group PLC has agreed to purchase BioChem Pharma Inc., of Montreal Canada, for $4 billion in stock. Shire is seeking to diversify its portfolio of products. The acquisition reduces Shire's dependence on its Adderall drug for treating hyperactivity, which accounts for 35 percent of revenue. After the news of the transaction was announced, shares of BioChem rose 9.4 percent to $29, while Shire shares fell 14 percent to close at $16.01.

Discussion: BioChem Pharma Inc., through an alliance with United Kingdom pharmaceutical giant Glaxo Wellcome, has developed 3TC, the world's bestselling HIV treatment, which is used with Glaxo's Retrovir for the treatment of AIDS; and Zeffix, which is sold in over 30 countries for the treatment of chronic hepatitis B. BioChem also makes vaccines for the flu, meningitis and pneumonia and is developing treatments for bladder cancer. BioChem Pharma has sold its diagnostics unit to focus on cancer and infectious disease treatments.

Shire Pharmaceuticals Group PLC concentrates on searching for, developing and marketing drugs. Its product roster includes treatments for cancer, such metabolic diseases as osteoporosis and central nervous system ailments, including Alzheimer's and attention deficit hyperactivity disorder. Shire Pharmaceutical Group's products, which are sold worldwide, include ADHD treatment Adderall and Carbatrol, a reformulation of a popular epilepsy treatment.

Copyright NVST.com, Inc. Dec 18, 2000
Provided by ProQuest Information and Learning Company. All rights Reserved

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