Maybe your doctor can use cannabidiols for treating post stroke seizures. But never mind, your doctor won't know about this research for another 50 yesrs.
http://www.biosciencetechnology.com/articles/2016/01/genomics-cannabidiols-drive-epilepsy-research?
Cannabidiol for treatment-resistant epilepsy
Cannabidiol (CBD) is the most abundant non-psychoactive cannabinoid
in the cannabis plant. There have been many animal studies in different
species that show it has anticonvulsant effects, and there has been
anecdotal evidence that it is also effective in children with
treatment-resistant epilepsies such as Dravet Syndrome (DS) and
Lennox-Gastaut Syndrome (LGS). Two studies at AES detailed the efficacy
of Epidiolex, a pharmaceutical liquid formulation of the cannabidiol in
humans.
The Food and Drug Administration (FDA) recently completed a
double-blind randomized controlled Phase 3 trial of Epidiolex, and the
analysis is expected to be done in February 2016.
Orrin Devinksy, director of the NYU Epilepsy Center presented the
most updated data of Epidiolex from the Expanded Access programs, which
is an open-label trial that took place at 16 sites. Open label means
that all participants and physicians knew they were receiving and
administering the drug and at what doses. No patients received placebos.
The data represents safety data for 313 patients, of which 261
patients had three months of continuous exposure to the drug.
Participants in the study ranged in age from four months to 41 years,
with a median age of 11.8 years. Devinksy explained that the cohort was
made up of children and young adults with not only very
treatment-resistant epilepsy, but very frequent seizures. Before the
patients received Epidiolex, the median number of convulsive seizures
over 28 days was 31, but the mean was 138.9.
Of the participants, 19 percent had no definite known cause of the
epilepsy, DS was present in 17 percent, and LGS in 15 percent.
After 12 weeks, overall participants saw a 45 percent reduction in
convulsive seizure frequency, and among all patients almost half (47
percent) experienced a 50 percent or greater reduction in seizures. Nine
percent of all patients were seizure free and 13 percent with DS were
seizure free. According to Devinksy, GLS patients also saw a very
favorable response for atonic seizures, which is one of the most common
types in that syndrome, with a median reduction of 71 percent.
“It’s important to highlight this is an extremely treatment
refractory group,” Devinksy said at the press conference. “So these are
numbers that are much greater than I would have predicted and certainly
would have ever predicted from anything like a placebo response,
although the randomized double blind studies will give us that more
scientific data.”
Of side effects that were seen in 10 percent or more of patients, the
most common included somnolence, diarrhea, fatigue, decreased appetite,
convulsion and vomiting. Devinsky said that four percent of all
patients quit the study because of side effects, and 12 percent withdrew
due to lack of effectiveness. He noted that both those numbers are
relatively low for an antiepileptic drug trial.
Michael Oldham, formerly at UCSF and currently at the University of
Louisville, authored a related study that tested the long-term efficacy
of Epidiolex. Researchers followed a subset of 25 patients at UCSF
Benioff Children’s Hospital in San Francisco for one year. Participants
had an average age of 9 and took cannabidiol in conjunction with their
other anti-epileptic medication. At the press conference, Oldham said 36
percent of the participants saw a greater than 50 percent reduction in
seizures and one participant with DS remained seizure-free after one
year. Twelve people left the study for lack of effectiveness and one
experienced a clear increase in seizure frequency from the CBD.
“This is a significantly drug-resistant population, so the fact that
we did find from a third to 45 percent of patients with a greater than
50 percent reduction is quite remarkable, and definitely merits
continuing to move ahead and certainly supports doing the randomized
trial to see if that plays out,” Oldham said.
“These kind of response rates in such a treatment-resistant group
with very high frequency occurrence of their seizures, it was a very
positive and promising finding,” Devinsky said at the press conference
of the studies. “I think this adds more fuel to the fire that this drug
is definitely likely to be effective for some people.”
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