The effect of metaphit (a phencyclidine analogue with an acylating isothiocyanate) on kindling development and kindled seizures from amygdala was investigated in rats pretreated once with metaphit. Administration of a single dose of metaphit (10 or 20 mg/kg intraperitoneally i.p.) 4 h before the first electrical stimulation of the amygdala did not in itself induce seizures, but greatly facilitated development of behavioral seizures during kindling. This effect persisted throughout the whole process of electrical amygdala kindling without further dosing. In contrast, metaphit only transiently and modestly increased the growth of afterdischarge (AD) duration. In kindled rats, pretreatment with a single dose of metaphit (20 mg/kg) 8 h before the test stimulation reduced the threshold current required to elicit a stage 5 seizure and shortened the latency for bilateral forelimb clonus (BFC) without changing AD duration or BFC duration. The facilitation of kindling development and kindled seizures may be due to an excessive excitatory transmission by metaphit in the limbic seizure circuitry.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1528-1157.1994.tb02536.xDOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

kindling development
12
development kindled
12
kindled seizures
12
amygdala kindling
8
single dose
8
dose metaphit
8
metaphit mg/kg
8
metaphit
7
kindling
5
seizures
5

Similar Publications

Background: Seizures in Alzheimer's Disease (AD) are increasingly recognized to occur and can increase cognitive decline and reduce survival compared to unaffected age-matched peers (Lyou et al. 2018). Administration of antiseizure medicines (ASMs) to AD patients with epileptiform activity may improve cognition (Vossel et al.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Background: Early-onset Alzheimer's disease (EOAD) associated with amyloid precursor protein (APP) duplications or presenilin (PSEN) variants increases risk of seizures. Targeting epileptiform activity with antiseizure medicine (ASM) administration to AD patients may beneficially attenuate cognitive decline (Vossel et al, JAMA Neurology 2021). However, whether mechanistically distinct ASMs differentially suppress seizures in discrete EOAD models is understudied (Lehmann et al, Neurochem Res 2021).

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Epilepsy is one of the oldest neurological disorders discovered by mankind. This condition is firmly coupled with unprovoked seizures stimulated by irrepressible neuroelectrical blasts. Orally taken valproate family has been employed for prophylactic management; however, oral administration is not applicable for critical scenarios, thus calling for medication routes fulfilling necessities of immediate innervation.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Gut-microbiota-brain Axis and post-traumatic epilepsy.

Epilepsia Open

December 2024

Department of Pediatrics and Children's Discovery and Innovation Institute, David Geffen School of Medicine at the University of California, Los Angeles, California, USA.

There has been growing evidence that perturbations in gut-microbiota-brain axis (GMBA) are involved in mechanisms of chronic sequelae of traumatic brain injury (TBI). This review discusses the connection between GMBA and post-traumatic epilepsy (PTE), the latter being a common outcome of TBI. The focus is on two aspects of post-TBI GMBA dysfunction that are relevant to epilepsy.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!