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The Journal of Neurophysiology Vol. 88 No. 2 August 2002, pp. 783-793
Copyright ©2002 by the American Physiological Society
1Departments of Comparative Medicine and 2Neurology and Neurological Sciences, Stanford University School of Medicine, Stanford, California 94305-5336
Buckmaster, Paul S. and
Emilia H. Wong.
Evoked Responses of the Dentate Gyrus During Seizures in
Developing Gerbils With Inherited Epilepsy. J. Neurophysiol. 88: 783-793, 2002. When they are 1-2 mo old,
domesticated Mongolian gerbils begin having initially mild seizures
which become more severe with age. To evaluate the development of this
increasing seizure severity, we obtained field potential responses of
the dentate gyrus to paired-pulse stimulation of the perforant path
during seizures. In 18 gerbils that were 1.5-8.0 mo old, 73 seizures
were analyzed. We measured population spike amplitude, the slope of the
field excitatory postsynaptic potential (fEPSP), and the population spike amplitude ratio (2nd/1st) to evaluate excitatory and inhibitory synaptic processes. In gerbils <2 mo old, exposure to a novel environment was followed by an increase in population spike amplitude and then by seizure onset, but population spike amplitude ratio and
fEPSP slope remained at baseline levels, and multiple population spikes
were never evoked. As previously reported for chronically epileptic
gerbils, these findings provide little evidence of a disinhibitory
seizure-initiating mechanism in the dentate gyrus when young gerbils
begin having seizures. In young gerbils evoked responses changed little
during the behaviorally mild seizures. In contrast, most seizures in
older gerbils included generalized convulsions, postictal depression,
and evoked responses that changed dramatically. In older gerbils,
shortly after seizure onset the dentate gyrus became hyperexcitable.
Population spike amplitude and fEPSP slope peaked, and multiple
population spikes were evoked, suggesting that mechanisms for seizure
amplification and spread are more developed in older gerbils. Next,
dentate gyrus excitability decreased precipitously, and population
spike amplitude and fEPSP slope diminished. This period of
hypoexcitability began before the end of the seizure, suggesting it may
contribute to seizure termination. After the convulsive phase of the
seizure, older gerbils remained motionless during a period of postictal
depression, and population spike amplitude remained suppressed until
the abrupt switch to normal exploratory activity. These findings
suggest that the mechanisms of postictal depression may suppress
granule cell excitability. The population spike amplitude ratio peaked after the convulsive phase and then gradually returned to the baseline
level an average of 12 min after seizure onset, suggesting that granule
cell inhibition recovers within minutes after a spontaneous seizure.
Although it is unclear whether the seizure-related changes in evoked
responses are a cause or an effect of increased seizure severity in
older gerbils, their analysis provides clues about developmental
changes in the mechanisms of seizure spread and termination.
This article has been cited by other articles:
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S. S. Kumar, X. Wen, Y. Yang, and P. S. Buckmaster GABAA Receptor-Mediated IPSCs and {alpha}1 Subunit Expression Are Not Reduced in the Substantia Nigra Pars Reticulata of Gerbils With Inherited Epilepsy J Neurophysiol, April 1, 2006; 95(4): 2446 - 2455. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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