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Query: UMLS:C0036572 (
seizures
)
80,221
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The anticonvulsant, adverse and biochemical effects of the novel antiepileptic drug vigabatrin (gamma-vinyl GABA), which increases GABA (gamma-aminobutyric acid) levels by inhibition of the GABA degrading enzyme
GABA aminotransferase
, were examined in amygdala-kindled rats after acute and chronic administration. Vigabatrin proved to be a potent anticonvulsant drug at acute doses (100-200 mg/kg), but during chronic administration, the anticonvulsant activity of the treatment was lost already in the second week of treatment. Tolerance also developed to the adverse effects, i.e. hypothermia, sedation and motor impairment. Determination of vigabatrin in plasma indicated that tolerance was not due to declining drug levels. Furthermore, determination of endogenous amino acids in plasma showed that GABA levels were highly elevated throughout the period of treatment, although the extent of GABA accumulation decreased in the second week. After cessation of chronic treatment with vigabatrin, there was no clear indication of withdrawal symptoms, except a prolonged
seizure
or afterdischarge duration in experiments with 100 mg/kg per day. The data suggest that chronic treatment with vigabatrin may be associated with a loss of anticonvulsant efficacy, at least when the drug is given as monotherapy.
...
PMID:Development of tolerance to the anticonvulsant effect of vigabatrin in amygdala-kindled rats. 161 78
Extensive electrical stimulation of the perforant pathway input to the hippocampus results in a characteristic pattern of neuronal death, which is accompanied by an impairment of cognitive functions similar to that seen in human temporal lobe epilepsy. The excitotoxic hypothesis of epileptic cell death [Olney, J. W. (1978) in Kainic Acid as a Tool in Neurobiology, eds. McGeer, E., Olney, J. W. & McGeer, P. (Raven, New York), pp. 95-121; Olney, J. W. (1983) in Excitotoxins, eds. Fuxe, K., Roberts, P. J. & Schwartch, R. (Wenner-Gren International Symposium Series, Macmillan, London), Vol. 39, pp. 82-96; and Rothman, S. M. & Olney, J. W. (1986) Ann. Neurol. 19, 105-111] predicts an imbalance between excitation and inhibition, which occurs probably as a result of hyperactivity in afferent pathways or impaired inhibition. In the present study, we investigated whether the enhancement of gamma-aminobutyric acid (GABA)-mediated (GABAergic) inhibition of neurotransmission by blocking the GABA-metabolizing enzyme,
GABA transaminase
, could influence the histopathological and/or the behavioral outcome in this epilepsy model. We demonstrate that the loss of pyramidal cells and hilar somatostatin-containing neurons can be abolished by enhancing the level of synaptically released GABA, and that the preservation of hippocampal structure is accompanied by a significant sparing of spatial memory as compared with placebo-treated controls. These results suggest that enhanced GABAergic inhibition can effectively block the pathophysiological processes that lead to excitotoxic cell death and, as a result, protect the brain from
seizure
-induced cognitive impairment.
...
PMID:Enhanced GABAergic inhibition preserves hippocampal structure and function in a model of epilepsy. 165 57
Seizure
susceptibility and GABA metabolism were altered in the substantia nigra [SN] of adult male Sprague Dawley rats when these animals were acclimating to an altered plasma osmolality. Changes in GABA metabolism were measured in vivo in SN of the freely moving rat. Suitable precautions were taken to avoid any post-mortem flux of glutamate to GABA and to correct for the underestimation of GABA build up in SN due to the finite diffusion rate of gamma-vinyl GABA [GVG] after stereotaxic injection of small amounts into one side of the brain. Control experiments provided evidence that changes in osmolality, within a normal physiological range, did not affect significantly
gamma-aminobutyric acid transaminase
[
GABA-T
]. Also kindling via the medial septum [MS], in the absence of electrical stimulation did not alter GABA metabolism in SN, thus providing a stable baseline for studies of osmotic effects. Hyperosmolality was associated with a rise in
seizure
thresholds, with a marked reduction of the rate of GABA synthesis in SN, and with a substantial increase in turnover time of the GABA pool. Hypoosmolality, of a degree known to be associated with mild cerebral edema and swelling localized to astrocytes, markedly reduced
seizure
threshold, and reduced GABA pool size in SN, but did not alter the rate of GABA synthesis significantly. These results demonstrate by new and independent means the relationship between GABA metabolism in the SN and
seizure
susceptibility in vivo.
...
PMID:Alterations of GABA metabolism and seizure susceptibility in the substantia nigra of the kindled rat acclimating to changes in osmotic state. 178 28
(4S)-4-Amino-5,6-heptadienoic acid [S)-gamma-allenyl-GABA; MDL 72483) is a potent inactivator of brain
GABA-T
in mice; (ED50 (i.p.) = 60 mg.kg-1; ED50 (oral) = 70 mg.kg-1). Its anticonvulsant effects against 3-mercaptopropionic acid (MPA)-induced
seizures
in mice is related to the elevation of whole brain GABA concentrations: The mentioned doses of MDL 72483 which cause a decrease of
GABA-T
activity by 50%, produce within 5 h after dosing an increase of GABA concentration by about 3 mumol.g-1, and protect 50% of the mice against
seizures
in this model of presynaptic GABA deficit. When given orally MDL 72483 is about five times more potent than vigabatrin [4R/S)-4-amino-5-hexenoic acid) a known antiepileptic
GABA-T
inhibitor. Complete protection was achieved with a dose of 150 mg.kg-1. Similar to vigabatrin, MDL 72483 does not protect significantly against metrazol-induced convulsions. However, at a dose of 300 mg.kg-1, the time elapsing between metrazol administration and onset of convulsions was prolonged by a factor of 3.4. Oral administration of MDL 72483 for up to 19 days at a daily dose of 91-96 mg.kg-1 did not produce any obvious behavioral changes in mice, nor was the ED50 of the drug in MPA-
seizure
tests significantly altered by the pretreatment. These observations indicate that MDL 72483 is a promising drug for the treatment of certain epilepsies.
...
PMID:(4S)-4-amino-5,6-heptadienoic acid (MDL 72483): a potent anticonvulsant GABA-T inhibitor. 178 30
Vigabatrin is a selective, irreversible suicide inhibitor of
GABA transaminase
and thus increases brain and CSF GABA. In 33 adult patients with long standing refractory epilepsy on treatment with one or two standard anti-convulsant drugs, the addition of vigabatrin up to 3g daily for eight weeks was associated with a 48.2% reduction in
seizure
frequency. Twenty patients who had exhibited a 50% or more reduction in frequency of one or more
seizure
types entered an eight week double-blind placebo controlled phase. Patients on vigabatrin maintained a 54.7% reduction of
seizure
frequency, whereas those on placebo showed an 18.6% increase in
seizure
frequency, a highly significant difference between the two groups. In the open phase, seven patients were withdrawn due to unacceptable and reversible adverse events. The commonest side effects were drowsiness, depression and mood instability, and headaches. Vigabatrin is a potentially valuable new treatment for chronic epilepsy, especially partial
seizures
with or without secondary generalisation.
...
PMID:Vigabatrin: rational treatment for chronic epilepsy. 229 96
Vigabatrin (gamma-vinyl-GABA), an irreversible inhibitor of
gamma-aminobutyric acid transaminase
, has been reported to be effective in the treatment of refractory epilepsies. Animal toxicology studies have shown that long-term application of vigabatrin induces intramyelinic edema and microvacuolation of the white matter in non-primate species. However, clinical and neuropathological studies of patients exposed to long-term vigabatrin treatment have, so far, provided no evidence for microvacuolation in the human brain. We report on the histopathological findings of selective amygdalohippocampectomy specimens from a 36-year-old female patient treated with vigabatrin for a period of 11.5 months, and from 2 control patients with chronic refractory temporal lobe
seizures
. All specimens showed changes associated with chronic epileptic
seizures
including focal neuronal loss and hippocampal gliosis. Microvacuoles, intramyelinic edema or other manifestations of neurotoxic damage were not observed in vigabatrin exposed tissue, supporting the view that this compound may not exert hippocampal neurotoxicity in humans.
...
PMID:Neuropathology of a human hippocampus following long-term treatment with vigabatrin: lack of microvacuoles. 238 87
C57BL/10Bg sps/sps mice display behavioral arrest, similar to generalized absence
seizures
. Compared with the parent strain C57BL/10Bg SPS/SPS, the activities of glutamate decarboxylase (GAD, E. C. 2.6.1.15),
GABA aminotransferase
(
GABA-T
, E. C. 2.6.1.19), aspartate aminotransferase (ASP-T, E. C. 2.6.1.1), and glutamate dehydrogenase (GDH, E. C. 1.4.1.3) in whole brain crude supernatant were significantly reduced in the sps/sps mice. Alanine aminotransferase activity (ALA-T, E. C. 2.6.1.2), was not altered in any of the strains, and normalization of GAD,
GABA-T
and GDH activities by that of ALA-T, further revealed significant differences between the normal strain (SPS/SPS), the heterozygotes (SPS/sps), and behavioral arrest (sps/sps) mice. These results suggest the possible involvement of GABAergic and glutamatergic neurotransmission in the absence-like behavior displayed by sps/sps mice. Open field behavior of C57BL/10Bg sps/sps mice is characterized by periods of marked inactivity which easily distinguish affected homozygotes, from their heterozygotes littermates.
...
PMID:The C57BL/10Bg sps/sps mouse: a mutant with absence-like seizures; neurochemical and behavioral correlates. 239 34
1. Gamma-vinyl GABA (GVG) is a new anticonvulsant drug that enhances levels of GABA in the brain by irreversibly inhibiting
GABA transaminase
. 2. To further evaluate the effects and mechanism of action of GVG in the human brain, we measured acetylcholinesterase (AChE) activity and levels of homovanillic acid (HVA), 5-hydroxyindoleacetic acid (5-HIAA), cyclic nucleotides (cAMP, cGMP), total GABA (TGABA), and GVG in CSF of 78 patients with complex partial epilepsy. The CSF samples were taken at baseline and after 3 months of GVG administration (3 g GVG per day). Thereafter, the responders (= 50% decrease in number of
seizures
) were divided (double-blind) into two groups that received either 1.5 g or 3 g of GVG per day for the next 3 months. The third CSF sample was taken after this double-blind period. 3. TGABA levels were increased during the GVG treatment (p less than 0.001). In the whole group of patients AChE, HVA, 5-HIAA, and cAMP did not differ from baseline values, cGMP levels were slightly elevated after 3 months of GVG administration (p = 0.019), but were no longer elevated after 6 months. Responders had slightly lower AChE activity than nonresponders (p = 0.041). After 6 months of drug treatment the cGMP levels of patients receiving 1.5 g of GVG did not differ from those receiving 3 g. 4. In conclusion, GVG administration elevates levels of TGABA in the CSF without any clear of constant change to cholinergic and aminergic transmission or effect on cyclic nucleotides. Our study further emphasizes the specific mechanism of action of GVG via GABAergic transmission.
...
PMID:Effect of gamma-vinyl GABA treatment on cholinergic and aminergic neurotransmission and on cyclic nucleotides in human complex partial epilepsy--a CSF study. 245 56
The main objective of this work was to study the role of the GABAergic system on the convulsions elicited by the organochlorine insecticide lindane. The concentration of lindane in rat brain at the onset of the first tonic convulsion was taken as the endpoint for the neurotoxic action of the insecticide administered by intravenous infusion. Pretreatment with the GABA agonists muscimol and progabide, the GABA uptake blocker SK&F 89976-A, the
GABA transaminase
inhibitor gamma-acetylenic GABA, and the GABA indirect agonist phenobarbital significantly increased the threshold concentration of lindane in brain required to induce convulsions. The GABA agonist THIP, the GABA competitive antagonist bicuculline, and the prodrug cetyl-GABA had no effect on the brain level of lindane required to induce
seizures
. The noncompetitive GABA antagonists, picrotoxinin and pentylenetetrazol, significantly decreased the brain concentration of lindane needed to elicit convulsions. The concentration of GABA in the brain of lindane-treated rats was only modified by the significant increase produced after gamma-acetylenic GABA pretreatment. These results show that the convulsions elicited by lindane can be facilitated by some GABA antagonists and antagonized by GABA mimetics, especially those that enhance GABA functionality. The present data are consistent with the proposed in vitro competition of lindane for the picrotoxinin binding site associated with the Cl- ionophore of the GABAA receptor, and suggest that lindane may also interact in vivo with this site.
...
PMID:GABAergic modulation of lindane (gamma-hexachlorocyclohexane)-induced seizures. 247 71
The effects of three drugs, namely gamma-vinyl GABA (vigabatrin), gamma-acetylenic GABA, and aminooxyacetic acid, which increase brain GABA concentrations by irreversible inhibition of GABA degradation, were studied in amygdala-kindled rats. Vigabatrin 800 or 1,200 mg/kg i.p. 4 h after its administration, caused prolongation of behavioural
seizures
and electrographic afterdischarges recorded from the stimulated amygdala. One to three days after administration it dose dependently reduced
seizure
severity,
seizure
duration and afterdischarge duration in most animals. Determination of GABA levels in synaptosomes isolated from 12 brain regions of kindled rats 4 or 48 h after injection of 1,200 mg/kg vigabatrin indicated that the variable effects of this drug at different times after its administration could be related to differences in the time course of nerve terminal GABA increases in selective brain regions such as amygdala and corpus striatum. In contrast to vigabatrin, gamma-acetylenic GABA, 100 mg/kg i.p., reduced
seizure
severity in kindled rats as early as 4 h after its administration but afterdischarge duration increased significantly on subsequent days. Similar late increases in afterdischarge duration (and limbic
seizure
activity) after the time of maximum anticonvulsant effect had elapsed were also observed with vigabatrin, which could suggest that the anticonvulsant effect of such drugs is followed by withdrawal hyperexcitability. Aminooxyacetic acid, 20 mg/kg i.p., exerted no significant anticonvulsant effect in kindled rats but prolonged afterdischarge duration in several of the animals studied. The data suggest that
GABA-T
inhibitors, such as vigabatrin, differ from most antiepileptic drugs previously tested in the kindling model in that they may produce both anticonvulsant and proconvulsant effects at the same dose in the same animal as a function of time after administration.
...
PMID:Anticonvulsant and proconvulsant effects of inhibitors of GABA degradation in the amygdala-kindling model. 274 84
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