|
|
||||||||
The Journal of Neurophysiology Vol. 86 No. 6 December 2001, pp. 2748-2753
Copyright ©2001 by the American Physiological Society
Neuronal Networks Group, Department of Physiology and Biophysics, St. Mary's Hospital Medical School, Imperial College of Science, Technology and Medicine, London W2 1PG, United Kingdom
Finnerty, G. T.,
M. A. Whittington, and
J.G.R. Jefferys.
Altered Dentate Filtering During the Transition to Seizure in the
Rat Tetanus Toxin Model of Epilepsy. J. Neurophysiol. 86: 2748-2753, 2001. The dentate gyrus is thought
to be a key area in containing the spread of seizure discharges in
temporal lobe epilepsy. We investigated whether it actively contributes
to the transition to seizure in vivo using the tetanus toxin chronic
experimental epilepsy. Brief epileptic discharges lasted <2 s in
freely moving animals and were clearly distinguishable from spontaneous
seizures that lasted tens of seconds. This suggested that the changes
underpinning the transition to seizure started within the first few
seconds of seizure onset. During this period, we found that the
amplitude of dentate gyrus population spikes depressed initially, but
from 1.1 s after seizure onset, they potentiated. The amplitude
and number of CA3 population spikes paralleled the pattern found in the
dentate gyrus. We used hippocampal slices to study dentate filtering in
more detail. The perforant pathway was stimulated repetitively at the
frequency of field postsynaptic potentials found during epileptic
discharges in vivo. The amplitude of dentate gyrus population spikes
decreased to a steady state in naïve hippocampal slices. In
hippocampal slices prepared from rats previously injected with tetanus
toxin, population spike amplitude decreased transiently and then
potentiated. We found that the biphasic profile and rate of
potentiation of dentate population spikes in vivo can be reproduced in
naïve hippocampal slices by blocking
GABAB receptors. We conclude that the filtering
properties of the dentate gyrus are altered in the tetanus toxin model
of epilepsy and propose how this contributes to the transition to
seizure in our animals.
This article has been cited by other articles:
![]() |
G. T. Finnerty and J.G.R. Jefferys Investigation of the Neuronal Aggregate Generating Seizures in the Rat Tetanus Toxin Model of Epilepsy J Neurophysiol, December 1, 2002; 88(6): 2919 - 2927. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
||||
| HOME | HELP | FEEDBACK | SUBSCRIPTIONS | ARCHIVE | SEARCH | TABLE OF CONTENTS |
| Visit Other APS Journals Online |