Sleep is the preferential period when epileptic spike-wave discharges appear in human epileptic patients, including genetic epileptic seizures such as Dravet syndrome with multiple mutations including SCN1A mutation and GABA receptor γ2 subunit Gabrg2 mutation in patients, which presents more severe epileptic symptoms in female patients than male patients. However, the seizure onset mechanism during sleep still remains unknown. Our previous work has shown that the sleep-like state-dependent homeostatic synaptic potentiation can trigger epileptic spike-wave discharges in one transgenic heterozygous knock-in mouse model.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFDuring non-rapid eye movement (NREM) sleep, cortical neuron activity alternates between a depolarized (firing, up-state) and a hyperpolarized state (down-state) coinciding with delta electroencephalogram (EEG) slow-wave oscillation (SWO, 0. 5-4 Hz) . Recently, we have found that artificial sleep-like up/down-states can potentiate synaptic strength in layer V cortical neurons .
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