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Query: UMLS:C0036572 (
seizures
)
80,221
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Several rodent models of cortical malformation are available for the study of cellular mechanisms associated with early-onset epilepsy, but few are associated with spontaneous
seizures
. We examined the effect of pilocarpine on the spontaneous
seizure
development and excitability of the CA1 pyramidal cells of rats after prenatal treatment with methylazoxymethanol (MAM).
Pilocarpine
induced status epilepticus (SE) onset latency was greater for normal rats than for MAM-treated rats. After several days of normal behavior following pilocarpine treatment, the duration of spontaneous
seizures
were greater in MAM-pilocarpine rats than in normal-pilocarpine rats. Compared with the normal rats, electrical stimulation of afferent fibers resulted in more robust population responses in the CA1 region in all groups. At interstimulus intervals of 30 and 70 ms, the MAM-pilocarpine rats displayed a decrease in paired pulse inhibition versus the conventional MAM rats. A loss of somatostatin- and parvalbumin-immunoreactive neurons was apparent in the normal-pilocarpine rats, MAM-pilocarpine rats, and conventional MAM rats. These results indicate that pilocarpine induces spontaneous
seizures
and hyperexcitability in MAM-pilocarpine rats.
...
PMID:Pilocarpine-induced seizure susceptibility in rats following prenatal methylazoxymethanol treatment. 1607 84
An exposure of rats to gamma-radiation at different stages of prenatal development produces brain dysplasias of different degree displaying also different susceptibility to pilocarpine-induced
seizures
. Following irradiation on prenatal day 13 (E13), the susceptibility is minimal and significantly lower even in relation to non-irradiated rats [Setkowicz, Z., Janeczko, K., 2003. Long-term changes in susceptibility to pilocarpine-induced status epilepticus following neocortical injuries in the rat at different developmental stages. Epilepsy Res. 53, 216-224]. On the other hand, the rat brain injured on postnatal day 30 presents very high susceptibility to
seizures
in the same pilocarpine model of epilepsy [Setkowicz, Z., Kluk, K., Janeczko, K., 2003. Long-term changes in postnatal susceptibility to pilocarpine-induced
seizures
in rats exposed to gamma radiation at different stages of prenatal development. Epilepsia 44, 1267-1273]. It could, therefore, be hypothesised that the congenital brain dysplasia produced by irradiation on E13 would minimize the highly increased susceptibility to
seizures
observed in the injured brain. Wistar rats were exposed to gamma-rays on E13 and they received a mechanical brain injury on postnatal day 30 (P30). On postnatal day 60, pilocarpine was injected to evoke status epilepticus. During a 6-h period following the injection, motor manifestations of
seizure
activity were recorded and rated. Seven days after pilocarpine injection, the animals were sacrificed and their brains were fixed.
Pilocarpine
injections in non-irradiated rats with brains injured on P30 evoked
seizures
of very high intensity and extremely high mortality in relation to non-injured controls. This high susceptibility to
seizures
following the brain injury was considerably decreased in rats irradiated on E13. The data provide evidence that the brain dysplasia in the rat acquired at this stage of prenatal development can significantly reduce the increased susceptibility to
seizures
evoked by the postnatal brain injury.
...
PMID:A strong epileptogenic effect of mechanical injury can be reduced in the dysplastic rat brain. Long-term consequences of early prenatal gamma-irradiation. 1615 May 74
We employed in vitro and ex vivo imaging tools to characterize the function of limbic neuron networks in pilocarpine-treated and age-matched, nonepileptic control (NEC) rats.
Pilocarpine
-treated animals represent an established model of mesial temporal lobe epilepsy. Intrinsic optical signal (IOS) analysis of hippocampal-entorhinal cortex (EC) slices obtained from epileptic rats 3 wk after pilocarpine-induced status epilepticus (SE) revealed hyperexcitability in many limbic areas, but not in CA3 and medial EC layer III. By visualizing immunopositivity for FosB/DeltaFosB-related proteins which accumulate in the nuclei of neurons activated by
seizures
we found that: (1) 24 h after SE, FosB/DeltaFosB immunoreactivity was absent in medial EC layer III, but abundant in dentate gyrus, hippocampus proper (including CA3) and subiculum; (2) FosB/DeltaFosB levels progressively diminished 3 and 7 d after SE, whereas remaining elevated (p < 0.01) in subiculum; (3) FosB/DeltaFosB levels sharply increased 2 wk after SE (and remained elevated up to 3 wk) in dentate gyrus and in most of the other areas but not in CA3. A conspicuous neuronal damage was noticed in medial EC layer III, whereas hippocampus was more preserved. IOS analysis of the stimulus-induced responses in slices 3 wk after SE demonstrated that IOSs in CA3 were lower (p < 0.05) than in NEC slices following dentate gyrus stimulation, but not when stimuli were delivered in CA3. These findings indicate that CA3 networks are hypoactive in comparison with other epileptic limbic areas. We propose that this feature may affect the ability of hippocampal outputs to control epileptiform synchronization in EC.
...
PMID:Impaired activation of CA3 pyramidal neurons in the epileptic hippocampus. 1639 89
Children who have status epilepticus have continuous or rapidly repeating
seizures
that may be life-threatening and may cause life-long changes in brain and behavior. The extent to which status epilepticus causes deficits in auditory discrimination is unknown. A naturalistic auditory location discrimination method was used to evaluate this question using an animal model of status epilepticus. Male Sprague-Dawley rats were injected with saline on postnatal day (P) 20, or a convulsant dose of pilocarpine on P20 or P45.
Pilocarpine
on either day induced status epilepticus; status epilepticus at P45 resulted in CA3 cell loss and spontaneous
seizures
, whereas P20 rats had no cell loss or spontaneous
seizures
. Mature rats were trained with sound-source location and sound-silence discriminations. Control (saline P20) rats acquired both discriminations immediately. In status epilepticus (P20) rats, acquisition of the sound-source location discrimination was moderately impaired. Status epilepticus (P45) rats failed to acquire either sound-source location or sound-silence discriminations. Status epilepticus in rat causes an age-dependent, long-term impairment in auditory discrimination. This impairment may explain one cause of impaired auditory location discrimination in humans.
...
PMID:Pilocarpine seizures cause age-dependent impairment in auditory location discrimination. 1659 70
Cholinergic and gabaergic systems play an important role generating electroencephalographic activity and regulating vigilance states.
Pilocarpine
is a cholinergic agonist commonly used to induce
seizures
and an epilepticus-like state in rodents. A relationship between status epilepticus and reactive oxygen species has been also suggested which could result in
seizure
-induced neurodegeneration. The aim of this study was to evaluate the existence of oxidative damage as well as the antioxidant enzyme response in cortex and hippocampus after the administration of an intraperitoneal (350 mg/kg) and an intracerebroventricular (360 microg, 1 microl) pilocarpine injection in rats. The GABA agonist muscimol (1 mg/kg, i.p.), with described neuroprotective properties, was used as a negative control. Only systemic pilocarpine induced oxidative damage. Malondialdehyde levels, as a marker of lipid peroxidation (LP), increased in both regions (55-56%). Catalase (52-80%) and superoxide dismutase (53-60%) activities also rose in both regions but glutathione peroxidase activity only increased in cortex (45%). Glutathione reductase and caspase-3 activity did not change. In conclusion, systemic pilocarpine produced oxidative brain damage, whereas local pilocarpine brain injection had no effects. Moreover, the enzymatic determinations performed in this study are a good tool to study brain injury in pharmacological manipulations such as the ones used in short recording EEG studies.
...
PMID:Antioxidant response analysis in the brain after pilocarpine treatments. 1664 87
Pilocarpine
-induced status epilepticus (SE) causes widespread tyrosine phosphorylation in the brain. It has been postulated that this intracellular signal may mediate potentially epileptogenic changes in the morphology and physiology of particular brain regions, including the hippocampus. The present study evaluated the effects of herbimycin A, a protein tyrosine kinase (PTK) inhibitor, over the acute (during which intense biochemical and electrophysiological activation occurs) and the chronic phase (characterized by spontaneous and recurrent epileptic
seizures
and the presence of synaptic reorganization, e.g., mossy fiber sprouting) of the pilocarpine model of epilepsy. The administration of a single dose of 1.74 nmol of herbimycin A (i.c.v., 5 microL) 5 min after the onset of SE did not change the acute behavioral manifestation of
seizures
despite significantly decreasing c-Fos immunoreactivity in different areas of the hippocampus and of the limbic cortex. Herbimycin-treated animals developed spontaneous recurrent
seizures
, as did control animals, with a similar latency for the appearance of the first
seizure
and similar
seizure
frequency. Neo-Timm staining revealed that all animals experiencing SE, regardless of whether or not injected with herbimycin, showed aberrant mossy fiber sprouting in the supragranular region of the dentate gyrus. Herbimycin did not obviously affect neuronal cell death as evaluated in Nissl-stained sections. These results indicate that the PTK blockade achieved with the current dose of herbimycin reduced the acute c-Fos expression but failed to alter the spontaneous
seizure
frequency or to attenuate the morphological modifications triggered by the SE.
...
PMID:Effects of herbimycin A in the pilocarpine model of temporal lobe epilepsy. 1669 26
The septal region of the basal forebrain plays a critical role modulating hippocampal excitability and functional states. Septal circuits may also play a role in controlling abnormal hippocampal hyperexcitability in epilepsy. Both lateral and medial septal neurons are targets of hippocampal axons. Since the hippocampus is an important epileptogenic area in temporal lobe epilepsy, we hypothesize that excessive excitatory output will promote sustained neurodegeneration of septal region neurons.
Pilocarpine
-induced status epilepticus (SE) was chosen as a model to generate chronic epileptic animals. To determine whether septal neuronal populations are affected by hippocampal
seizures
, immunohistochemical assays were performed in brain sections obtained from age-matched control, latent period (7 days post-SE) and chronically epileptic (more than one month post-SE survival) rats. An anti-NeuN (neuronal nuclei) antibody was used to study total neuronal numbers. Anti-ChAT (choline acetyltransferase), anti-GAD (glutamic acid decarboxylase) isoenzymes (65 and 67), and anti-glutamate antibodies were used to reveal cholinergic, GABAergic and glutamatergic neurons, respectively. Our results revealed a significant atrophy of medial and lateral septal areas in all chronically epileptic rats. Overall neuronal density in the septum (medial and lateral septum), assessed by NeuN immunoreactivity, was significantly reduced by approximately 40% in chronically epileptic rats. The lessening of neuronal numbers in both regions was mainly due to the loss of GABAergic neurons (80-97% reduction in medial and lateral septum). In contrast, populations of cholinergic and glutamatergic neurons were spared. Overall, these data indicate that septal GABAergic neurons are selectively vulnerable to hippocampal hyperexcitability, and suggest that the processing of information in septohippocampal networks may be altered in chronic epilepsy.
...
PMID:Septal GABAergic neurons are selectively vulnerable to pilocarpine-induced status epilepticus and chronic spontaneous seizures. 1693 46
Pilocarpine
is a cholinergic agonist capable to induce
seizures
and an epilepticus-like state in rodents. This status epilepticus (SE) is an useful animal model to study the development and understanding of the neuropathology, behavioural and electroencephalographic alterations of human temporal lobe epilepsy. It has been suggested a relationship between SE and reactive oxygen species (ROS) that can result in
seizure
-induced neurodegeneration. The aim of this study was to evaluate the existence of oxidative damage and the changes in the antioxidant system in cortex after administration of a high pilocarpine dose. Rats were injected with pilocarpine (350 mg/kg i.p.) or with saline as control and 2h after the animals were sacrificed. Malondialdehyde (MDA) levels, as marker of lipid peroxidation, significantly increased (64%) after pilocarpine treatment evidencing oxidative damage. Antioxidant enzyme activities--catalase (CAT), glutathione peroxidase (GP) and superoxide dismutase (SOD)--significantly increased in response to pilocarpine (28%, 28% and 21%, respectively). GP and Mn-SOD gene expression were induced by pilocarpine treatment. Vitamin E concentration in brain cortex decreased (15%) as result of pilocarpine administration. In conclusion, the high dose of pilocarpine, used in the present study, induces oxidative damage and increases antioxidant enzyme activities and expression in brain cortex. Moreover, increased lipid peroxidation produces the consumption of Vitamin E.
...
PMID:Antioxidant response and oxidative damage in brain cortex after high dose of pilocarpine. 1720 54
In this study we investigated whether intracerebroventricular (i.c.v.) injection of L-NAME (a nitric oxide synthase inhibitor) or CaEDTA (an extracellular zinc chelator) or the combination of the two could affect the initial phase of pilocarpine induced (2 h)
seizures
. Two groups of rats were used. Animals from both groups were given with i.c.v. injections of either saline (10 microl), L-NAME (150 microg/10 microl), CaEDTA (100 mM/10 microl) or L-NAME and CaEDTA. One group received pilocarpine HCl (380 mg/kg i.p.) the other served as control.
Pilocarpine HCl
was injected intraperitoneally 10 min later. The behavior of the animals was observed for 2h and the intensity of their
seizures
was scored. The rats were then sacrificed and their brains were removed and analyzed for zinc ions by using the immersion autometallography and the TSQ fluorescence staining. All the animals which received pilocarpine HCl developed
seizures
. Despite treatment with L-NAME and/or CaEDTA we found that the latency and the intensity of
seizures
were similar in both groups investigated. The distribution of stainable zinc ions and the intensity of staining in hippocampus were not affected by pilocarpine and found unchanged after L-NAME and/or CaEDTA injections in both the control animals and the pilocarpine treated animals. The data suggest that the nitric oxide system and zinc ions do not affect pilocarpine-induced
seizures
in their initial state.
Seizure
2007 Jul
PMID:The lack of effects of zinc and nitric oxide in initial state of pilocarpine-induced seizures. 1737 8
Pilocarpine
administration to rats results in status epilepticus (SE) and after a latency period to the occurrence of spontaneous
seizures
. The model is commonly used to investigate mechanisms of epileptogenesis as well as the antiepileptic effects of novel compounds. Surprisingly, there have been no video-EEG studies determining the duration of latency period from SE to the appearance of the first spontaneous
seizures
or the type and frequency of spontaneous
seizures
at early phase of pilocarpine-induced epilepsy even though such information is critical for design of such studies. To address these questions, we induced SE with pilocarpine in 29 adult male Wistar rats with cortical electrodes. Rats were continuously video-EEG monitored during SE and up to 23 days thereafter. The first spontaneous
seizures
occurred 7.2+/-3.6 days after SE. During the follow-up, the mean daily
seizure
frequency was 2.6+/-1.9, the mean
seizure
duration 47+/-7 s, and the mean behavioral
seizure
score 3.2+/-0.9. Typically first
seizures
were partial (score 1-2). Interestingly, spontaneous
seizures
occurred in clusters with cyclicity, peaking every 5 to 8 days. These data show that in the pilocarpine model of temporal lobe epilepsy the latency period is short. Because many of the early
seizures
are partial and the
seizures
occur in clusters, the true phenotype of epilepsy triggered by pilocarpine-induced SE may be difficult to characterize without continuous long-term video-EEG monitoring. Finally, our data suggest that the model can be used for studies aiming at identifying the mechanisms of
seizure
clustering.
...
PMID:Cyclicity of spontaneous recurrent seizures in pilocarpine model of temporal lobe epilepsy in rat. 1744 4
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