Anticonvulsant drugs and the skin
Many drugs can cause cutaneous (skin) side effects. The severity of the symptoms can range from a mild rash to life-threatening conditions causing skin failure and death. Certain groups of drugs are known to cause frequent, specific, or serious skin reactions. The anticonvulsant or antiepileptic drugs are one such group of drugs, some of which have notable side effects on the skin.
Recognising the side effects that involve the skin is important, as prompt withdrawal of the drug can prevent worsening of symptoms caused by the drug. A decision may have to be made in a patient who has suffered a drug eruption whether to continue an important drug that might have caused the reaction or switch to an alternative drug.
When confronted by a new skin rash in a patient, a full drug history is paramoung and should include prescribed, over-the-counter, and alternative medicines the patient is taking so that drug eruptions can be considered or ruled out.
Anticonvulsant drugs
Anticonvulsant drugs, also known as antiepileptic or antiseizure drugs, are a diverse group of medications that are commonly used in the treatment of epilepsy and seizures, and less commonly for other conditions such as trigeminal neuralgia and bipolar disorder. They work by reducing the excessive firing of neurons that happens in a seizure.
| Reaction | Symptoms |
|---|---|
| Morbilliform (measles-like) drug eruption |
|
| Urticarial drug eruption (hives) |
|
| Erythema multiforme |
|
| Stevens-Johnson syndrome / toxic epidermal necrolysis (TEN) |
|
| Anticonvulsant hypersensitivity syndrome |
|
Morbilliform eruption | Urticaria | Erythema multiforme |
Toxic epidermal necrolysis | Purpuric eruption | Gingival hyperplasia |
| Drug | Skin reaction | Notes |
| Carbamazepine |
|
|
| Phenytoin |
|
|
| Fosphenytoin |
|
|
| Phenobarbital | ||
| Lamotrigine |
|
|
| Valproic acid |
|
|
Some racial groups are especially prone to cutaneous adverse reactions with anticonvulsants. Han Chinese and other South east Asians groups who have a particular HLA-B allele, HLA-B*1502 are significantly more likely to develop severe reactions such as Stevens Johnson syndrome and toxic epidermal necrolysis (TEN) with anticonvulsants. Testing for the particular allele prior to the commencement of an anticonvulsant may be useful in identifying patients at risk.
Related information
References:
- Herbert AA, Ralston JP. Cutaneous reactions to anticonvulsant medications. J Clin Psychiatry. 2001;62 (Suppl 14):22-26
- Consumer information about medicines – Medsafe (NZ)
On DermNet NZ:
- Drug eruptions
- Acne medicamentosa
- Morbilliform drug eruption
- Erythema multiforme
- Drug hypersensitivity syndrome
- Drug-induced photosensitivity
- Stevens-Johnson / toxic epidermal necrolysis
- Urticaria
Other websites:
- Antiepileptic drugs – Medscape Reference
Books about skin diseases:
See the DermNet NZ bookstore

