AI Article Synopsis

  • The study investigates the effects of carnitine supplementation on children with epilepsy who are being treated with valproate (VPA).
  • 69 patients were analyzed, with comparisons made between those who received carnitine and those who did not, focusing on various lab values.
  • Results indicate that carnitine helps maintain normal serum-free carnitine levels and is associated with lower serum amylase levels, suggesting it may protect against potential pancreatic injury related to VPA treatment.

Article Abstract

Background: The benefits of carnitine supplementation in patients treated with valproate (VPA) are not clear. Therefore, we retrospectively explored the benefits of carnitine supplementation by analyzing laboratory data.

Methods: We measured the serum-free carnitine (FC), VPA, aspartate aminotransferase, alanine aminotransferase, amylase, and ammonia levels, and the platelet count, in 69 patients with childhood-onset epilepsy treated with VPA. Eight patients had received carnitine supplementation. The serum FC and acylcarnitine levels were measured using an enzyme cycling method. We compared laboratory values between patients with and without carnitine supplementation and analyzed the correlations between serum FC levels and laboratory values.

Results: The serum FC levels were normal (median, 48.8 μmol/L; range: 41.9-68.3 μmol/L) in all eight patients with carnitine supplementation, but below normal in 32 of 61 patients without supplementation. The median serum amylase levels were lower in the patients with carnitine supplementation (median, 48 U/L; range: 27-149 U/L) than in those without (median, 7 U/L; range: 14-234 U/L). The platelet count and serum ammonia levels did not differ significantly between patients with and without supplementation. There was no significant correlation between the serum FC level and the platelet count, serum amylase level, or ammonia level.

Conclusions: Carnitine supplementation helps maintain serum FC levels in patients treated with VPA. The lower serum amylase levels in patients with carnitine supplementation may reflect protective effects of carnitine against latent pancreatic injury.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.yebeh.2021.108220DOI Listing

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