Member Comments are provided by individuals and reflect their personal opinions only. Under NO circumstances should you act on any advice or opinion posted in this forum.  ALWAYS check with your personal physician before taking any action regarding your health! MedHelp International and our partners, sponsors and affiliates have no obligation to monitor any comments posted on this site, or the content and/or accuracy of such exchanges. MedHelp International does not endorse the views of any user.
Neurology  (Expert Forum)
 | 
Driving and Other Risks After One-Year Seizure Free
This forum is for questions and support regarding neurology issues such as: Alzheimer's Disease, ALS, Autism, Brain Cancer, Cerebral Palsy, Chronic Pain, Epilepsy, Fibromyalgia, Headaches, MS, Neuralgia, Neuropathy, Parkinson's Disease, RSD, Sleep Disorders, Stroke, Traumatic Brain Injury.

Driving and Other Risks After One-Year Seizure Free

by veryniceguy_, Sep 24, 2002 12:00AM
Two years after a craniotomy to remove a left parietal AVM, I suffered a GM seizure and was put on dilantin (having not had seizures ever before, but having had a hemmorhage). I've now been free of seizures for another year. Two questions:
1. Just how safe is it to return to driving? Are there any statistics on the odds of a repeat seizure after 1 year seizure free, 2 years, 5 years etc?
2. I've had no problems on dilantin, but have been worried about evidence in the literature about risks of cerebral atrophy. How common/serious is this long-term side effect, and does it warrant a look at alternative AEDs.
Thanks.

by CCF-Neuro-M.D.-JT, Sep 24, 2002 12:00AM
1.Depends on which state you live in (different states have different driving restrictions for seizure patients) and your doctor's own clinical judgement as to the risk of seizure recurrence. In someone who is neurologically normal with no source of seizure (like tumor, scarring or AVM)and normal EEG, the risk of recurrence at 2 years is 25%.I would suspect yours is higher as you have a chronic source of cortical irritation predisposing you to seizures.
2.You probably mean cerebellar atrophy which is the lower back part of your brain that helps fine tune your movements. It's quite rare but not unheard of. Other side effects of dilantin include gum overgrowth in patients who have poor dental hygiene and folate ( vitamin) deficiency. There are other drugs to choose from in the year 2002, but dilantin is tried and true. So if you're tolerating it well, it's ok to be on it long term. If you still have doubts as to whether or not you want to stay on it, talk to your neurologist for other options such as topamax and lamictal.  But keep in mind all of these antiseizure meds do have their share of side effects. Good luck.
Member Comments (2)

by puma, Oct 15, 2002 12:00AM

I prefer Klonopin myself, to take care of my seizures. It is the only drug I can tolerate, but beware, it is addictive and a killer to try to detox from later if you need to for some reason. I take a fairly high dose 8 mg's a day. I used to be on 10 mg's but was able to knock it down to 8 and still no seizures for over one month now. After I detoxed from alcohol four years ago, an improper out-patient detox, I developed the seizure disorder. Even while sober for two years I still averaged a seizure once every week to ten days, mostly partial focal, but I have recently had total black out types as well after relapsing. I am back off the booze again though and no more seizures. I hope it stays that way.

I hope you can keep you seizures under control. Good luck.

Chatahan
Continue discussion
RSS Expert Activity
H1N1 and Our Pets
Nov 05 by Thomas Dock, Vet. Technician
In the ER: A Unicorn's Journey
Nov 03 by Jon Geller, D.V.M.
Doctors Resign Over Coca-Cola Fundi...
Nov 03 by Adam Tanase, D.C.