Literature DB >> 10885736

Is epilepsy a progressive disease? The neurobiological consequences of epilepsy.

A J Cole1.   

Abstract

While primary, or idiopathic, epilepsies may exist, in the vast majority of cases epilepsy is a symptom of an underlying brain disease or injury. In these cases, it is difficult if not impossible to dissociate the consequences of epilepsy from the consequences of the underlying disease, the treatment of either the disease or the epilepsy, or the actual seizures themselves. Several cases of apparent complications of epilepsy are presented to illustrate the range of consequences encountered in clinical practice and the difficulty in assigning blame for progressive symptomatology in individual cases. Because of the difficulty in interpreting clinical material, many investigators have turned to epilepsy models in order to address the potential progressive consequences of recurrent seizures. The authors review experimental data, mainly from animal models, that illustrate short-, medium-, and long-term morphological and biochemical changes in the brain occurring after seizures, and attempt to relate these observations to the human condition.

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Mesh:

Year:  2000        PMID: 10885736     DOI: 10.1111/j.1528-1157.2000.tb01520.x

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Epilepsia        ISSN: 0013-9580            Impact factor:   5.864


  7 in total

Review 1.  Presynaptic modulation controlling neuronal excitability and epileptogenesis: role of kainate, adenosine and neuropeptide Y receptors.

Authors:  João O Malva; Ana P Silva; Rodrigo A Cunha
Journal:  Neurochem Res       Date:  2003-10       Impact factor: 3.996

Review 2.  The current state of treatment of status epilepticus.

Authors:  Lawrence J Hirsch; Jan Claassen
Journal:  Curr Neurol Neurosci Rep       Date:  2002-07       Impact factor: 5.081

3.  Targeting Seizure-Induced Neurogenesis in a Clinically Relevant Time Period Leads to Transient But Not Persistent Seizure Reduction.

Authors:  Parul Varma; Rebecca Brulet; Ling Zhang; Jenny Hsieh
Journal:  J Neurosci       Date:  2019-07-15       Impact factor: 6.167

4.  Solid Evidence for a Thin Hypothesis.

Authors:  Jerry Shih
Journal:  Epilepsy Curr       Date:  2019-12-05       Impact factor: 7.500

5.  Regional and global resting-state functional MR connectivity in temporal lobe epilepsy: Results from the Epilepsy Connectome Project.

Authors:  Aaron F Struck; Melanie Boly; Gyujoon Hwang; Veena Nair; Jedidiah Mathis; Andrew Nencka; Lisa L Conant; Edgar A DeYoe; Manoj Raghavan; Vivek Prabhakaran; Jeffrey R Binder; Mary E Meyerand; Bruce P Hermann
Journal:  Epilepsy Behav       Date:  2021-02-18       Impact factor: 2.937

6.  Proteomic differences in the hippocampus and cortex of epilepsy brain tissue.

Authors:  Geoffrey Pires; Dominique Leitner; Eleanor Drummond; Evgeny Kanshin; Shruti Nayak; Manor Askenazi; Arline Faustin; Daniel Friedman; Ludovic Debure; Beatrix Ueberheide; Thomas Wisniewski; Orrin Devinsky
Journal:  Brain Commun       Date:  2021-03-09

7.  Resective surgery prevents progressive cortical thinning in temporal lobe epilepsy.

Authors:  Marian Galovic; Jane de Tisi; Andrew W McEvoy; Anna Miserocchi; Sjoerd B Vos; Giuseppe Borzi; Juana Cueva Rosillo; Khue Anh Vuong; Parashkev Nachev; John S Duncan; Matthias J Koepp
Journal:  Brain       Date:  2020-12-05       Impact factor: 15.255

  7 in total

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