Literature DB >> 19000675

Cognitive dysfunction after experimental febrile seizures.

Céline M Dubé1, Jun-Li Zhou, Mark Hamamura, Qian Zhao, Alex Ring, Jennifer Abrahams, Katherine McIntyre, Orhan Nalcioglu, Tatiana Shatskih, Tallie Z Baram, Gregory L Holmes.   

Abstract

While the majority of children with febrile seizures have an excellent prognosis, a small percentage are later discovered to have cognitive impairment. Whether the febrile seizures produce the cognitive deficits or the febrile seizures are a marker or the result of underlying brain pathology is not clear from the clinical literature. We evaluated hippocampal and prefrontal cortex function in adult rats with a prior history of experimental febrile seizures as rat pups. All of the rat pups had MRI brain scans following the seizures. Rats subjected to experimental febrile seizures were found to have moderate deficits in working and reference memory and strategy shifting in the Morris water maze test. A possible basis for these hippocampal deficits involved abnormal firing rate and poor stability of hippocampal CA1 place cells, neurons involved in encoding and retrieval of spatial information. Additional derangements of interneuron firing in the CA1 hippocampal circuit suggested a complex network dysfunction in the rats. MRI T2 values in the hippocampus were significantly elevated in 50% of seizure-experiencing rats. Learning and memory functions of these T2-positive rats were significantly worse than those of T2-negative cohorts and of controls. We conclude that cognitive dysfunction involving the hippocampus and prefrontal cortex networks occur following experimental febrile seizures and that the MRI provides a potential biomarker for hippocampal deficits in a model of prolonged human febrile seizures.

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Year:  2008        PMID: 19000675      PMCID: PMC2649663          DOI: 10.1016/j.expneurol.2008.10.003

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Exp Neurol        ISSN: 0014-4886            Impact factor:   5.330


  52 in total

1.  Working memory of school-aged children with a history of febrile convulsions: a population study.

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Review 3.  Applications of the Morris water maze in the study of learning and memory.

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5.  Hippocampal abnormalities after prolonged febrile convulsion: a longitudinal MRI study.

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Review 6.  Do prolonged febrile seizures produce medial temporal sclerosis? Hypotheses, MRI evidence and unanswered questions.

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7.  Mossy fiber plasticity and enhanced hippocampal excitability, without hippocampal cell loss or altered neurogenesis, in an animal model of prolonged febrile seizures.

Authors:  Roland A Bender; Celine Dubé; Rebeca Gonzalez-Vega; Erene W Mina; Tallie Z Baram
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Authors:  Roland A Bender; Sheila V Soleymani; Amy L Brewster; Snow T Nguyen; Heinz Beck; Gary W Mathern; Tallie Z Baram
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  48 in total

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Review 2.  Lessons from the laboratory: the pathophysiology, and consequences of status epilepticus.

Authors:  Karthik Rajasekaran; Santina A Zanelli; Howard P Goodkin
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Review 3.  Prospects for imaging-related biomarkers of human epileptogenesis: a critical review.

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4.  Regulation of seizure-induced MeCP2 Ser421 phosphorylation in the developing brain.

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6.  Quantitative Evaluation of Medial Temporal Lobe Morphology in Children with Febrile Status Epilepticus: Results of the FEBSTAT Study.

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7.  T2 relaxation time post febrile status epilepticus predicts cognitive outcome.

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8.  Coordination of hippocampal theta and gamma oscillations relative to spatial active avoidance reflects cognitive outcome after febrile status epilepticus.

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9.  Febrile seizures and the wandering granule cell.

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10.  A novel, noninvasive, predictive epilepsy biomarker with clinical potential.

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