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Book ChapterDOI

Animal models of drug-resistant epilepsy.

Wolfgang Löscher
- Vol. 243, pp 149-166
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TLDR
This work has shown that both the individual genetic background and kindling-induced processes determine whether a rat becomes a responder or a non-responder to anticonvulsant treatment after kindling, and is currently studying the cellular mechanisms underlying the development of drug-resistant kindled seizures.
Abstract
It is not known why and how epilepsy becomes drug resistant in 20-30% of patients, while other patients with seemingly identical seizure types can achieve control of seizures with medication. An animal model of epilepsy allowing selection of pharmacoresistant and pharmacosensitive subgroups of animals would be a valuable tool to study mechanisms of pharmacoresistance and to develop more effective treatment strategies. Only a few models are available which mimic patterns of drug resistance in humans with epilepsy. One model seems to be particularly interesting: amygdala-kindled rats. In this model in Wistar rats, animals which do not respond to repeated or chronic administration of anti-epileptic drugs (non-responders) can be separated from animals in whom anti-epileptics are effective (responders). Hence, pharmacoresistant subgroups of kindled rats provide a unique tool to study why seizures become intractable, particularly because pathophysiological processes in these resistant rats can be directly compared with those of kindled rats that respond to treatment. By using this model, we have recently shown that both the individual genetic background and kindling-induced processes determine whether a rat becomes a responder or a non-responder to anticonvulsant treatment after kindling. We are currently studying the cellular mechanisms underlying the development of drug-resistant kindled seizures.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Critical review of current animal models of seizures and epilepsy used in the discovery and development of new antiepileptic drugs.

TL;DR: Preclinical strategies of AED discovery and development need a conceptual shift that is moving away from using models that identify therapies for the symptomatic treatment of epilepsy to those that may be useful for identifying therapies that are more effective in the refractory population.
Journal ArticleDOI

Blood-Brain Barrier Active Efflux Transporters: ATP-Binding Cassette Gene Family

TL;DR: Modulation of ABC efflux transporters at the BBB forms a novel strategy to enhance the penetration of drugs into the brain and may yield new therapeutic options for drug-resistant CNS diseases.
Journal ArticleDOI

Role of drug efflux transporters in the brain for drug disposition and treatment of brain diseases

TL;DR: Transporter characteristics for drug efflux transport systems identified in the blood-brain barrier and blood-cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) barrier are summarized to summarize strategies for modulating or by-passingDrug efflux transporters at the BBB as novel therapeutic approaches to drug-resistant brain diseases.
Journal ArticleDOI

Animal models of epilepsy for the development of antiepileptogenic and disease-modifying drugs. A comparison of the pharmacology of kindling and post-status epilepticus models of temporal lobe epilepsy.

TL;DR: A comparison of the pharmacology of chronic models with models of acute (reactive or provoked) seizures in previously healthy (non-epileptic) animals demonstrates that drug testing in chronic models of epilepsy yields data which are more predictive of clinical efficacy and adverse effects, so that chronic models should be used relatively early in drug development to minimize false positives.
Journal ArticleDOI

Drug resistance in epilepsy : Putative neurobiologic and clinical mechanisms

TL;DR: The laboratory and clinical evidence to date supporting the drug‐transport and the drug-target hypotheses are reviewed and directions for future research are provided, to define more clearly the role of these hypotheses in the clinical spectrum of drug‐resistant epilepsy.
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Why female mice rats are not preferred for screening of anti epileptic activity?

In this model in Wistar rats, animals which do not respond to repeated or chronic administration of anti-epileptic drugs (non-responders) can be separated from animals in whom anti-epileptics are effective (responders).