Lamotrigine and Pregnancy

Links shared publicly online about this topic

Final results from 18 years of the International Lamotrigine Pregnancy Registry

neurology.org — “Final results from 18 years of the International Lamotrigine Pregnancy RegistryView full resource at neurology.org

  • View Related
  • Share

Most Recently Shared on May 23, 2011 at 11:30 pm By:

virtualneuronet Edgar Avalos, MD Neurology and Health Group

Final results from 18 years of the International Lamotrigine Pregnancy Registry http://bit.ly/iQuoKt

9 months ago...

Low-Dose Lamotrigine Safest Anti-Epileptic Drug in Pregnancy : Internal Medicine News

internalmedicinenews.com — “Internal Medicine News Digital Network is the online destination and multimedia properties of Internal Medicine News, the independent news publication. Our breaking news covers all areas of internal medicine including adolescent medicine; cardiovascular disease; dermatology; diabetes, endocrinology and metabolism; gastroenterology; geriatric medicine; infectious diseases; mental health; oncology and hematology; nephrology and urology; neurology; pulmonary disease and sleep medicine; practice treView full resource at internalmedicinenews.com

  • View Related
  • Share

Most Recently Shared on June 5, 2011 at 11:46 pm By:

MiriamETucker Miriam E. Tucker Patient Expert

RT @IntMedNews: Low-Dose Lamotrigine Safest Anti-Epileptic Drug in Pregnancy http://bit.ly/itWNJu #epilepsy

8 months ago...

Epilepsy Drug, Pregnancy Up Autism Risk

webmd.com — “Women who take the epilepsy drug valproate while pregnant may increase their child's risk of autism, a new study shows.View full resource at webmd.com

  • View Related
  • Share

Most Recently Shared on December 1, 2008 at 9:24 pm By:

WebMD_News WebMD_News Health News

WebMD Health News Epilepsy Drug, Pregnancy Up Autism Risk: Women who take the epileps.. http://tinyurl.com/6sxluz

3 years ago...

Dose of epilepsy drug in pregnancy correlates with birth defect risk - Related Stories - AAP SmartBrief

smartbrief.com — “Researchers reported in The Lancet Neurology that increased doses of carbamazepine, lamotrigine, valproic acid and phenobarbital are all tied to a higher rate of birth defects, adding that dose selection is as important as type of drug. Data on about 4,000 pregnancies found the highest birth defect…View full resource at smartbrief.com

  • View Related
  • Share

Most Recently Shared on June 6, 2011 at 5:47 pm By:

The Top 3 resources shared on this topic. More resources.

Key stats and trends about this topic

Featuring the top 3 experts for this topic

Advertisement

Share via Email

Share this WisdomCard with others by embedding on your site or blog.

300x260

425x300

560x390