AI Article Synopsis

  • The study investigated the role of inflammation in children with seizures by analyzing inflammatory cytokines in their blood and saliva and comparing them to healthy controls, as well as assessing potential associations with viral infections (HHV-6 and EBV).
  • Results indicated that children with seizures had significantly higher levels of various inflammatory cytokines compared to controls, with specific cytokine levels linked to the frequency and duration of seizures.
  • The findings suggested that neuroinflammatory pathways are activated differently in seizure patients, but these changes did not appear to be related to the presence or load of viral infections.

Article Abstract

Purpose: Inflammation plays a crucial role in epileptogenesis. We analyzed inflammatory cytokines in plasma and saliva from children with seizures and healthy controls and measured their associations with HHV6 and EBV infection.

Methods: We analyzed plasma from 36 children within 24 h of seizures (cases) and 43 healthy controls and saliva from 44 cases and 44 controls with a multiplex immunoassay. Saliva from all controls and 65 cases and blood from 26 controls and 35 cases were also analyzed by PCR for viral DNA. Primary outcome was cytokine levels in cases vs. controls. Secondary outcomes included detection of HHV-6 and EBV viral DNA in cases vs. controls and viral loads in cases vs. controls. Statistical analysis included the Wilcoxon Rank Sum test, Fisher's exact test, ANOVA, and Spearman correlation.

Results: Compared to controls, patients had higher levels of CCL11 (p = 0.0018), CCL26 (p<0.001), IL10 (p = 0.044), IL6 (p<0.001), IL8 (p = 0.018), and MIP1β (p = 0.0012). CCL11 was higher with 3 or more seizures (p = 0.01), seizures longer than 10 min (p = 0.001), and when EEG showed focal slowing (p = 0.02). In saliva, febrile seizures had higher levels of IL-1β (n = 7, p = 0.04) and new onset seizures had higher IL-6 (n = 15, p = 0.02). Plasma and saliva cytokine levels did not show a correlation. The frequency of HHV-6 and EBV detection was similar across groups and not different than controls. We found no correlation between viral load and cytokine levels.

Conclusions: We showed differential activation of neuroinflammatory pathways in plasma from different seizure etiologies compared to controls, unrelated to viral infection.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.seizure.2021.05.022DOI Listing

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