RobinN
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I have run into articles, mostly in vet sites regarding seizures and ammonia in the blood. Over burdened Liver funtion, abundance of proteins, and non protein nitrogen added to the food all brought on high levels of ammonia. This can cause seizures.
This is a good article about Natural Approaches, but I can't seem to cut and paste.
http://www.encyclopedia.com/doc/1G1-163199249.html
I will continue this as I find more information on it.
http://health.nytimes.com/health/guides/disease/hepatic-encephalopathy/overview.htmlWhen the liver cannot properly metabolize and and turn poisons into harmless substances in the body, these poisons build up in the bloodstream. One substance believed to be particularly harmful to the central nervous system is ammonia, which is produced by the body when proteins are digested. Ammonia is normally made harmless by the liver. Many other substances may also accumulate in the body if the liver is not working well. They add to the damage done to the nervous system.
In people with otherwise stable liver disorders, hepatic encephalopathy may be triggered by gastrointestinal bleeding, eating too much protein, infections, renal disease, procedures that bypass blood past the liver, and electrolyte abnormalities (especially a decrease in potassium). A potassium decrease may result from vomiting, or treatments such as paracentesis or taking diuretics ("water pills").
Hepatic encephalopathy may also be triggered by any condition that results in alkalosis, low oxygen levels in the body, use of medications that suppress the central nervous system (such as barbiturates or benzodiazepine tranquilizers), surgery, and sometimes by co-occurring illness.
Disorders that mimic or mask symptoms of hepatic encephalopathy include alcohol intoxication, sedative overdose, complicated alcohol withdrawal, Wernicke-Korsakoff syndrome, subdural hematoma, meningitis, and metabolic abnormalities such as low blood glucose.
Hepatic encephalopathy may occur as an acute, potentially reversible disorder or as a chronic, progressive disorder associated with chronic liver disease.
http://www.medhelp.org/posts/show/395337Elevated ammonia poisoning as a side-effect of divalproex sodium (Depakote) can lead poisoning to symptoms such as altered mental retardation
Mental status tests status, confusion
Delirium, and delirium
Delirium tremens. Some people do present with such symptoms even at low plasma amino acids levels.
Ideally, when elevated levels of ammonia poisoning is found in the setting of Depakote therapy, close monitoring of plasma amino acids levels should be done every week. If the elevation should persist, discontinuation of this drug Chemical dependence -
http://www.sciencedirect.com/scienc...serid=10&md5=2c282c362b9f4077dfe1ef31a7688fb1We evaluated seven adult patients with localization-related epilepsy who presented with different acute or subacute neurological symptoms related to valproate-induced hyperammonemic encephalopathy. Four of the seven patients had acute onset of confusion, decline in cognitive abilities, and ataxia. Two had subacute clinical symptoms, and the other patient had symptoms similar to those of acute toxicity. These unusual clinical symptoms and similar cases had not been reported in the literature before. Serum ammonia levels were elevated in all seven patients
This is a good article about Natural Approaches, but I can't seem to cut and paste.
http://www.encyclopedia.com/doc/1G1-163199249.html
I will continue this as I find more information on it.
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