Literature DB >> 16226430

Congenital brain dysplasias of different genesis can differently affect susceptibility to pilocarpine- or kainic acid-induced seizures in the rat.

Zuzanna Setkowicz1, Dominika Janicka, Anna Kowalczyk, Anna Turlej, Krzysztof Janeczko.   

Abstract

Interruption of neurogenesis and/or neuronal migration produces brain dysplasia modifying susceptibility to epileptic seizures in adulthood. The course of neurogenesis has a strictly defined time-table. Consequently, the developmental stage at which the interruption occurs determines what functional subsystem potentially involved in epileptogenesis will suffer from irreversible neuronal deficit. The present study attempts to verify a hypothesis that brain dysplasias of different genesis should also lead to different susceptibility to seizures evoked by receptor agonists of different functional specificity, like kainic acid or pilocarpine, a cholinergic or glutaminergic agonist, respectively. Pregnant Wistar rats were exposed to gamma-rays on gestation days 13, 15, 17 or 19 (E13, E15, E17 or E19). Sixty-day-old offsprings of the females were injected with kainic acid or pilocarpine to evoke status epilepticus. During a 6-h period following the injection, motor manifestations of seizure activity were recorded. Generally, the intensity of pilocarpine-induced symptoms was relatively low in rats irradiated on E13 or E15 but high in rats irradiated on E17 or E19. In rats treated with kainic acid, the trend was opposite, viz. the later the prenatal irradiation was performed, the less intense epileptic symptoms were induced in adulthood. The data provide evidence that dysplasias acquired during prenatal development may significantly amplify or reduce the brain susceptibility to seizures. However, this relation depends not only on the developmental stage at which the dysplasias were produced but also on the functional specificity of epileptogenic stimuli used in the experimental model of epilepsy.

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Year:  2005        PMID: 16226430     DOI: 10.1016/j.eplepsyres.2005.09.006

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Epilepsy Res        ISSN: 0920-1211            Impact factor:   3.045


  3 in total

1.  Irradiation exacerbates cortical cytopathology in the Eker rat model of tuberous sclerosis complex, but does not induce hyperexcitability.

Authors:  Naranzogt Tschuluun; H Jürgen Wenzel; Philip A Schwartzkroin
Journal:  Epilepsy Res       Date:  2006-09-29       Impact factor: 3.045

Review 2.  Novel animal models of pediatric epilepsy.

Authors:  Stéphane Auvin; Eduardo Pineda; Don Shin; Pierre Gressens; Andrey Mazarati
Journal:  Neurotherapeutics       Date:  2012-04       Impact factor: 7.620

3.  Structural changes in the neocortex as correlates of variations in EEG spectra and seizure susceptibility in rat brains with different degrees of dysplasia.

Authors:  Zuzanna Setkowicz; Kinga Gzielo; Michal Kielbinski; Krzysztof Janeczko
Journal:  J Comp Neurol       Date:  2021-12-22       Impact factor: 3.028

  3 in total

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