Publications by authors named "Lim-Anna Sieu"

Article Synopsis
  • Patients with focal temporal lobe seizures often lose consciousness, showing brain activity similar to deep sleep.
  • Previous studies in rats suggest that reduced arousal in the brain leads to decreased brain function during these seizures, but they didn't connect this to conscious behavior.
  • In this study using awake mice, researchers found that seizures affect behavior, particularly responses to sounds, by altering acetylcholine levels in the brain, highlighting the link between reduced brain activity and loss of consciousness during these episodes.
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Objectives: Absence seizures impair psychosocial function, yet their detailed neuronal basis remains unknown. Recent work in a rat model suggests that cortical arousal state changes prior to seizures and that single neurons show diverse firing patterns during seizures. Our aim was to extend these investigations to a mouse model with studies of neuronal activity and arousal state to facilitate future fundamental investigations of absence epilepsy.

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Objective: Impairment in consciousness is a debilitating symptom during and after seizures; however, its mechanism remains unclear. Limbic seizures have been shown to spread to arousal circuitry to result in a "network inhibition" phenomenon. However, prior animal model studies did not relate physiological network changes to behavioral responses during or following seizures.

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Focal limbic seizures can cause loss of consciousness. Previous work suggests that hippocampal seizures can increase activity in the lateral septum (LS) and decrease cholinergic output from the basal forebrain (BF), leading to deficits in conscious arousal. The mechanism by which LS and BF interact is unclear.

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Recent work suggests an important role for cortical-subcortical networks in seizure-related loss of consciousness. Temporal lobe seizures disrupt subcortical arousal systems, which may lead to depressed cortical function and loss of consciousness. Extracellular recordings show ictal neocortical slow waves at about 1 Hz, but it is not known whether these simply represent seizure propagation or alternatively deep sleep-like activity, which should include cortical neuronal Up and Down states.

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GABAergic interneurons are known to control activity balance in physiological conditions and to coordinate hippocampal networks during cognitive tasks. In temporal lobe epilepsy interneuron loss and consecutive network imbalance could favor pathological hypersynchronous epileptic discharges. We tested this hypothesis in mice by unilateral epileptogenic hippocampal kainate lesion followed by recording of extracellular potentials and patch-clamp from GFP-expressing interneurons in CA3, in an optimized recording chamber.

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4D ultrasound microvascular imaging was demonstrated by applying ultrafast Doppler tomography (UFD-T) to the imaging of brain hemodynamics in rodents. In vivo real-time imaging of the rat brain was performed using ultrasonic plane wave transmissions at very high frame rates (18,000 frames per second). Such ultrafast frame rates allow for highly sensitive and wide-field-of-view 2D Doppler imaging of blood vessels far beyond conventional ultrasonography.

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Ultrafast imaging using plane or diverging waves has recently enabled new ultrasound imaging modes with improved sensitivity and very high frame rates. Some of these new imaging modalities include shear wave elastography, ultrafast Doppler, ultrafast contrast-enhanced imaging and functional ultrasound imaging. Even though ultrafast imaging already encounters clinical success, increasing even more its penetration depth and signal-to-noise ratio for dedicated applications would be valuable.

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We developed an integrated experimental framework that extends the brain exploration capabilities of functional ultrasound imaging to awake and mobile rats. In addition to acquiring hemodynamic data, this method further allows parallel access to electroencephalography (EEG) recordings of neuronal activity. We illustrate this approach with two proofs of concept: a behavioral study on theta rhythm activation in a maze running task and a disease-related study on spontaneous epileptic seizures.

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Article Synopsis
  • Ultrafast ultrasonic imaging is a new technique that improves ultrasound data collection by using unfocused waves, which enhances the ability to differentiate between tissue and blood motion in Doppler imaging.* -
  • The proposed method uses spatiotemporal singular value decomposition (SVD) to reject noise in the ultrasound data, providing a more effective approach than traditional filters by analyzing multiple dimensions of data.* -
  • Tests showed that SVD filtering significantly improves blood flow detection, revealing previously unnoticed flows in various applications, including small animal brain imaging and clinical cases like neonate and organ Doppler imaging.*
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