Original software program is described, which revealed EEG activity characteristic of the onset of epileptic seizure and turned on electrical stimulation of the nucleus basalis of Meynert in WAG/Rij rats with congenital absence epilepsy. The program reliably detected the onset of seizure and automatically stopped it with a high-frequency train of electrical impulses (100-150 Hz). Thus, a feedback system of deep brain stimulation has been developed to stop early manifestations of absence epileptiform seizures.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFProlonged epileptic seizures during status epilepticus (SE) are known to cause neuronal death and lead to brain damage. Lesions in various brain regions can result in memory and cognitive impairment, thus searching of new neuroprotective drugs is important. We evaluated effects of single and chronic administration of ginseng extract on early and late changes in MRI measurements in the rat brain after lithium-pilocarpine SE.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBrain damage and neuronal loss caused by traumatic brain injury, ischemic stroke, and symptomatic status epilepticus can lead to severe long-term consequences, such as impairment in learning and memory and cognitive functions, and development of chronic epilepsy. This can be the result of morphologic and functional changes underlying temporal lobe epilepsy. Epilepsy patients have increased risk of status epilepticus.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIn the late 90-s of the previous century the American Society of Epileptologists defined a priority for research as "possibilities to predict a seizure, early determinate and reduct". A method, which would allow the prediction of epileptical seizure's onset based on the EEG data registered with the patient with an epilepsy disease, would also allow implementing the new approach to treatment. If it became reliably possible to predict a moment of seizure, based on the EEG dynamics, one could create an automated closed loop system to prevent a seizure.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAccording to the focal cortical theory of absence epilepsy, spike-and-wave discharges (SWDs) have a cortical focal origin in the perioral region of the somatosensory cortex in rats. In the present study the role of peripheral afferents of the perioral (snout) region in the occurrence of spontaneous SWDs was investigated in the WAG/Rij (Wistar Albino Glaxo from Rijswijk) rat model of absence epilepsy in order to examine whether an input from peripheral sources is imperative for the occurrence of SWDs. Twelve male WAG/Rij rats were chronically equipped with cortical EEG electrodes.
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