| Literature DB >> 34956052 |
Ricardo Mario Arida1, Adrielle Andrade Passos2, Alexandre Lebedev Graciani1, João Angelo Ferres Brogin3, Mayara de Almeida Lima Ribeiro2, Jean Faber4, Robson Campos Gutierre1, Lavinia Teixeira-Machado2.
Abstract
Background: Clinical and pre-clinical studies indicate a reduction in seizure frequency as well as a decrease in susceptibility to subsequently evoked seizures after physical exercise programs. In contrast to the influence of exercise after epilepsy previously established, various studies have been conducted attempting to investigate whether physical activity reduces brain susceptibility to seizures or prevents epilepsy. We report a systematic review and meta-analysis of different animal models that addressed the impact of previous physical exercise programs to reduce seizure susceptibility.Entities:
Keywords: animal model; brain resilience; epilepsy; physical exercise; seizure susceptibility
Year: 2021 PMID: 34956052 PMCID: PMC8702853 DOI: 10.3389/fneur.2021.771123
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Neurol ISSN: 1664-2295 Impact factor: 4.003
Figure 1Funnel plots related to each evaluated epileptogenic feature in animal models. The first plot shows the dispersion of the mean effects found in each study related to the latency to seizure onset feature. It is observed that there is an asymmetry among the samples with a leftward trend and high dispersion of the values relative to the limits of the funnel. However, all the effects are located at the top of the funnel showing a low standard error among studies. The second plot shows the dispersion of the effects found in each study related to the intensity of motor signal features. In this plot, it is observed the high heterogeneity among studies and high standard error. Furthermore, since there are only three studies, this plot shows the difficulty in quantitative analysis. The third plot shows the dispersion of the effects found in each study regarding the spikes/min feature. In this plot, it is possible to observe a considerable dispersion among the samples, mainly due to one study showing a high standard error. Although there is a significant overall effect favorable to physical exercise, corroborated by the asymmetry in the funnel plot, this dispersion pattern also demands an increase in the number of studies to improve the stability of the meta-analysis inference. The fourth figure shows the dispersion of the effects found in each study regarding the amplitude of spikes feature. It is possible to observe an effect of dispersion symmetry with a good homogeneity in the standard error among most studies. There is only one sample with a high standard error, but the lateralization of the overall effect in favor of exercise in the mitigation of epileptogenic effects corroborates the meta-analysis.
Figure 2A flow diagram of the systematic review literature search.
Summary of included study design, procedures and outcomes.
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| Setkowicz ( | Poland | 33 | Exp=15 / Ct=18 | Winstar rats | both-preference for males | 35 days old/not informed | treadmill and swimming | 45 days | 2 out of 3 days | 20 min | pilocarpine | Convulsive behaviorand EEG | Exercise reduced seizures susceptibility |
| Rambo ( | Brazil | 48 | Be: Exp=8 / Ct=8 EEG: Exp=8 / Ct=8 BA: Exp=8 / Ct=8 | Winstar rats | male | Adult/250-300g | swimming | 5 weeks | 5 days/week | 60 min | pentilenetetrazol | Convulsive behavior, EEG, and BA | Exercise attenuated seizures susceptibility and oxidative damage |
| Reiss ( | USA | 122 | Be: Exp=61 / Ct=61 several doses BA: Exp=61 / Ct=61 several doses | Sprague-Dawley rats | male | Adult/150-200g | voluntary wheel running | 3 weeks | 7days/week | kainic acid | Convulsive behavior and BA | Exercise reduced seizure susceptibility | |
| Souza ( | Brazil | 48 | Be: Exp=8 / Ct=8 EEG: Exp=8 / Ct=8 BA: Exp=8 / Ct=8 | Winstar rats | male | 90 days old/250-300g | swimming | 6 weeks | 5 days/week | 60 min | pentilenetetrazol | Convulsive behavior, EEG, and BA | Exercise reduced seizure susceptibility and EEG spike amplitude |
| Tutkun ( | Turkey | 14 | Exp=7 / Ct=7 | Winstar rats | male | Adult/180-200g | swimming | 90 days | 7 days/week | 15-30-60 min | penicillin | EEG | Short-duration exercise decreased the mean frequency and amplitude of epileptiform activity |
| Gomes da Silva ( | Brazil | 28 | Exp=14 / Ct=14 | Winstar rats | male | 21 days old/ 45-50g | treadmill | 39 days | 7 days/week | 60 min | pilocarpine | Convulsive behavior | Early life exercise may result in the development of more complex neural circuitry capable of tolerating greater brain damage in later life |
| Kim ( | Korea | 22 | Exp=11 / Ct=11 | ICR mice | male | Adult/35g | swimming | 6 weeks | 5 days/week | 60 min | kainic acid | Convulsive behavior and BA | Exercise decreased seizure activity and mortality |
| Kim ( | Korea | 18 | Exp=9 / Ct=9 | ICR mice | male | Adult/35g | swimming | 7 weeks | 3 days/week | 60 min | kainic acid | Convulsive behavior and BA | Exercise decreased seizure activity and mortality |
| Hrnčić ( | Serbia | 54 | Be: Exp=8/ Ct=8 EEG: Exp=8/ Ct=8 BA: Exp=6/ Ct=6 | Winstar rats | male | Adult/180-220g | treadmill | 30 days | 7 days/week | 30 min | homocysteine thiolactone | Convulsive behavior, EEG and BA | Exercise decreased HCT- induced seizure susceptibility |
| Holmes ( | USA | 36 | Be: Exp=11 / Ct=11 EEG: Exp=7 / Ct=7 | Sprague-Dawley rats | male | Adult/150-200g | voluntary wheel running | 3 weeks | 7 days/week | kainic acid | Convulsive behavior and EEG | Exercise reduced seizure severity and hippocampal glutamate release | |
| Kayacan ( | Turkey | 32 | Exp=16 / Ct=16 | Winstar rats | male | 20-24 weeks old/280-350g | treadmill | 13 weeks | 5 days/week | 15-30-60 min | penicillin | EEG | Exercise decreased the frequency of induced epileptiform activity |
| Kayacan ( | Turkey | 14 | Exp=7 / Ct=7 | Mongolian gerbils | male | 10 weeks old/34-48g | treadmill | 8 weeks | 7 days/week | 30 min | penicillin | EEG | Exercise decreased the spike/wave frequency |
| Vannucci Campos ( | Brazil | 44 | Exp=28 / Ct=16 | Winstar rats | female | Adult/220-250 | treadmill and voluntary wheel running | 6 weeks | 5 days/week | 30 min (treadmill) | pilocarpine | Convulsive behavior | Voluntary exercise reduced seizure susceptibility |
| Kayacan ( | Turkey | 16 | Exp=8 / Ct=8 | Winstar rats | male | 20-24 weeks old/280-350g | treadmill | 10 weeks | 5 days/week | 30 min | penicillin | EEG | Exercise decreased spike frequency |
| Kayacan ( | Turkey | 14 | Exp=7 / Ct=7 | Winstar rats | male | 19-23 weeks old/275-340g | treadmill | 10 weeks | 5 days/week | 30 min | penicillin | EEG | Exercise did not reduce the spike frequency and amplitude |
Ct, control; Exp, experimental; Be, behavior analysis; BA, biochemical analysis; EEG, electrophysiological analysis.
The quality of included studies based on the CAMARADES checklist.
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| Setkowicz | 2006 | Y | Y | N | N | Y | Y | N | N | Y | N | 5 |
| Rambo | 2009 | Y | Y | Y | N | N | N | Y | N | Y | Y | 6 |
| Reiss | 2009 | Y | Y | Y | N | Y | N | Y | N | Y | N | 6 |
| Souza | 2009 | Y | Y | Y | N | N | N | Y | N | Y | Y | 6 |
| Tutkun | 2010 | Y | Y | N | N | N | N | Y | N | Y | N | 4 |
| Gomes da Silva | 2011 | Y | Y | N | N | N | Y | Y | N | Y | N | 5 |
| Hrnčić | 2014 | Y | Y | Y | N | N | N | Y | N | Y | N | 5 |
| Kim | 2013 | Y | Y | Y | N | N | N | Y | N | Y | N | 5 |
| Kim | 2014 | Y | Y | Y | N | N | N | Y | N | Y | N | 5 |
| Holmes | 2015 | Y | Y | Y | N | Y | N | N | N | Y | Y | 6 |
| Kayacan(a) | 2016 | Y | N | Y | N | N | N | Y | N | Y | Y | 5 |
| Kayacan(b) | 2016 | Y | N | Y | N | N | N | Y | N | Y | Y | 5 |
| Vannucci Campos | 2016 | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | N | Y | Y | 9 |
| Kayacan | 2019 | Y | N | Y | N | N | N | Y | N | Y | N | 4 |
| Kayacan | 2020 | Y | N | Y | N | N | N | Y | N | Y | Y | 5 |
Figure 3Risk of bias assessment of selected studies.
Figure 4Summary of the meta-analysis on the effect of exercise on seizure susceptibility in animal models. The first column shows the studies included in this analysis, while the subsequent columns display the statistical features, mean and standard deviation (STD), related to experimental and control groups, respectively. The seventh column shows the weights associated with each study, calculated from the variance and number of animals. The eighth column shows the mean effect differences and their respective confidence intervals (CI 95%), assuming a random-effects approach, with between- and within-study heterogeneity given by T2 and I2. The last column displays the Forest plots associated with each analysis of each epileptogenic characteristic. We evaluated four features associated with the epileptogenic condition; two behavioral features: latency to seizure onset (6 studies) and intensity of motor signals (3 studies); and two electrophysiological features: spike/min (4 studies) and amplitude of spikes (6 studies). Of the behavioral characteristics, only latency to seizure onset showed an overall significant effect (z = 3.54, p < 0.001) while the two electrophysiological characteristics showed overall statistical significance in favor of exercise to mitigate seizure susceptibility, (spike/min: z = 4.19, p < 0.001, and amplitude of spikes: z = 3.01, p = 0.003).