AI Article Synopsis

  • - Neonatal hypoxia often leads to seizures that can affect brain development, with past research focusing either on hypoxia or drug treatments like phenobarbital (PB), rather than their combined effects, which are more relevant clinically.
  • - A study involving rat pups exposed to hypoxia and treated with PB revealed that female rats showed delayed impairment in hippocampal long-term potentiation (LTP) compared to males, with the timing of these effects varying based on sex and age.
  • - PB treatment after hypoxia did not worsen LTP but actually helped restore LTP to normal levels in males under certain conditions, indicating that PB may not harm brain development when given after hypoxic seizures.

Article Abstract

Introduction: Neonatal hypoxia is a common cause of early-life seizures. Both hypoxia-induced seizures (HS), and the drugs used to treat them (e.g., phenobarbital, PB), have been reported to have long-lasting impacts on brain development. For example, in neonatal rodents, HS reduces hippocampal long-term potentiation (LTP), while PB exposure disrupts GABAergic synaptic maturation in the hippocampus. Prior studies have examined the impact of HS and drug treatment separately, but in the clinic, PB is unlikely to be given to neonates without seizures, and neonates with seizures are very likely to receive PB. To address this gap, we assessed the combined and separate impacts of neonatal HS and PB treatment on the development of hippocampal LTP.

Methods: Male and female postnatal day (P)7 rat pups were subjected to graded global hypoxia (or normoxia as a control) and treated with either PB (or vehicle as a control). On P13-14 (P13+) or P29-37 (P29+), we recorded LTP of the Schaffer collaterals into CA1 pyramidal layer in acute hippocampal slices. We compared responses to theta burst stimulation (TBS) and tetanization induction protocols.

Results: Under the TBS induction protocol, female rats showed an LTP impairment caused by HS, which appeared only at P29+. This impairment was delayed compared to male rats. While LTP in HS males was impaired at P13+, it normalized by P29+. Under the tetanization protocol, hypoxia produced larger LTP in males compared to female rats. PB injection, under TBS, did not exacerbate the effects of hypoxia. However, with the tetanization protocol, PB - on the background of HS - compensated for these effects, returning LTP to control levels.

Discussion: These results point to different susceptibility to hypoxia as a function of sex and age, and a non-detrimental effect of PB when administered after hypoxic seizures.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10703306PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fneur.2023.1295934DOI Listing

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