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Epileptogenesis During Development: Injury, Circuit Recruitment, and Plasticity
Author(s) -
Sankar Raman,
Shin Don,
Liu Hantao,
Wasterlain Claude,
Mazarati Andrey
Publication year - 2002
Publication title -
epilepsia
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.687
H-Index - 191
eISSN - 1528-1167
pISSN - 0013-9580
DOI - 10.1046/j.1528-1157.43.s.5.11.x
Subject(s) - epileptogenesis , status epilepticus , epilepsy , neuroscience , brain damage , hippocampal formation , psychology , perforant pathway , neurodegeneration , medicine , perforant path , disease , dentate gyrus
Summary: Purpose: To use animal models of variable seizure induction in rats at different developmental stages to determine contributing factors for spontaneous seizures resulting from status epilepticus (SE) early in life. Methods: Two models of SE with distinct modes of seizure induction, lithium–pilocarpine (LiPC) and perforant path stimulation (PPS), were used at different ages. Multiple methods of determining neurodegeneration during an acute period and plastic changes in those monitored during the chronic phase were used. Results: Different modes of seizure induction lead to varying types and extents of damage, dependent on the age of the animals at the time of insult. LiPC resulted in injury to animals as young as 2 weeks and became widespread in animals 3 weeks old, whereas widespread damage after PPS was not seen until P35. Rats at an age with widespread damage in response to seizures also showed extensive immediate‐early gene activation and often developed spontaneous seizures and features of hippocampal plasticity seen in the epileptic brain. Conclusions: SE early in life results in multiple consequences to the developing brain. These changes, coexisting in the nonepileptic brain, can overlap in a maladaptive combination to result in the diseased state of epilepsy. The consequence of early seizures in immature animals is a function of both the developmental stage and the method of seizure induction.