Literature DB >> 12143354

Effects of brief seizures during development.

Libor Velísek1, Solomon L Moshé.   

Abstract

The effects of brief seizures during development depend on multiple factors such as underlying brain pathology, specific age of occurrence and frequency. Studies in rats are frequently used to determine the consequences of seizures in the developing brain. The shorter prepubertal development and life span of the rat compared to humans may suggest that brief seizures in the rat are not necessarily equivalent to brief seizures in humans. Nevertheless, there is substantial evidence that in the rat, the consequences of seizures are age-dependent. The immature brain is relatively resistant to morphological damage, especially in the hippocampus, and functional changes as measured by electrophysiology and behavior. Developmental kindling can be used as a model to study brief seizures early in life. Kindling permanently alters the brain so that rats stimulated again in adulthood require only few kindling stimuli for fully kindled seizures to occur although there are no apparent morphological and functional changes in the hippocampus resulting from kindling early in life. The appreciation that kindling can alter brain function without any discrete (to date) morphological changes may lead to the development of effective neuroprotective strategies to alter the process, but it is not clear that all kindling-induced changes are detrimental to the brain.

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Year:  2002        PMID: 12143354     DOI: 10.1016/S0079-6123(02)35032-5

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Prog Brain Res        ISSN: 0079-6123            Impact factor:   2.453


  8 in total

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2.  Harmful effect of kainic acid on brain ischemic damage is not related to duration of status epilepticus.

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Review 3.  The role of interleukin-1beta in febrile seizures.

Authors:  James G Heida; Solomon L Moshé; Quentin J Pittman
Journal:  Brain Dev       Date:  2009-02-13       Impact factor: 1.961

4.  Effective treatments of prolonged status epilepticus in developing rats.

Authors:  Henry Hasson; Mimi Kim; Solomon L Moshé
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Review 5.  The epileptic hypothesis: developmentally related arguments based on animal models.

Authors:  Aristea S Galanopoulou; Solomon L Moshé
Journal:  Epilepsia       Date:  2009-08       Impact factor: 5.864

Review 6.  Convulsing toward the pathophysiology of autism.

Authors:  Roberto Tuchman; Solomon L Moshé; Isabelle Rapin
Journal:  Brain Dev       Date:  2008-11-08       Impact factor: 1.961

7.  Clozapine response and pre-treatment EEG-is there some kind of relationship.

Authors:  Amresh Shrivastava; Megan Johnston; Nilesh Shah; Larry Stitt; Shivanshu Shrivastava; Avinash De Sousa
Journal:  Ind Psychiatry J       Date:  2014-01

8.  Long-Term Effects of Early Life Seizures on Endogenous Local Network Activity of the Mouse Neocortex.

Authors:  Pavlos Rigas; Charalambos Sigalas; Maria Nikita; Ani Kaplanian; Konstantinos Armaos; Leonidas Jordan Leontiadis; Christos Zlatanos; Aspasia Kapogiannatou; Charoula Peta; Anna Katri; Irini Skaliora
Journal:  Front Synaptic Neurosci       Date:  2018-11-27
  8 in total

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