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Journal ArticleDOI

Cellular mechanisms of epilepsy: a status report.

Marc A. Dichter, +1 more
- 10 Jul 1987 - 
- Vol. 237, Iss: 4811, pp 157-164
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TLDR
The spread of epileptic activity throughout the brain, the development of primary generalized epilepsy, the existence of "gating" mechanisms in specific anatomic locations, and the extrapolation of hypotheses derived from simple models of focal epilepsy to explain more complex forms of human epilepsy are not yet fully understood.
Abstract
The cellular phenomena underlying focal epilepsy are currently understood in the context of contemporary concepts of cellular and synaptic function. Interictal discharges appear to be due to a combination of synaptic events and intrinsic currents, the exact proportion of which in any given neuron may vary according to the anatomic and functional substrate involved in the epileptic discharge and the epileptogenic agent used in a given model. The transition to seizure appears to be due to simultaneous increments in excitatory influences and decrements in inhibitory processes--both related to frequency-dependent neuronal events. A variety of specific hypotheses have been proposed to account for the increased excitability that occurs during epileptiform activity. Although each of the proposed mechanisms is likely to contribute significantly to the epileptic process, no single hypothesis provides an exclusive unifying framework within which all kinds of focal epilepsy can be understood. The spread of epileptic activity throughout the brain, the development of primary generalized epilepsy, the existence of "gating" mechanisms in specific anatomic locations, and the extrapolation of hypotheses derived from simple models of focal epilepsy to explain more complex forms of human epilepsy, all are not yet fully understood.

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Citations
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Mossy fiber synaptic reorganization in the epileptic human temporal lobe.

TL;DR: The results are morphological evidence of mossy Fiber synaptic reorganization in the temporal lobe of epileptic humans, and suggest the intriguing possibility that mossy fiber sprouting and synaptic reorganizing induced by repeated partial complex seizures may play a role in human epilepsy.
Journal ArticleDOI

On the cellular and network bases of epileptic seizures

TL;DR: Although epileptic syndromes and their causes are diverse, the cellular mechanisms of seizure generation appear to fall into only two categories: rhythmic or tonic "runaway" excitation or the synchronized and rhythmic interplay between excitatory and inhibitory neurons and membrane conductances.
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Interneuron dysfunction in psychiatric disorders

TL;DR: In conclusion, animal models demonstrate that the molecular basis of disruption is linked to specific defects in the development and function of interneurons — the cells that are responsible for establishing inhibitory circuits in the brain.
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Selective vulnerability of the hippocampus in brain ischemia.

TL;DR: *Department of Neurophysiology, Institute of Physiology, Medical Faculty, Ruhr-Universitlt Bochum, and MRC Anatomical Neuropharmacology Unit, _ Department of Pha-rmacology, University of Oxford, Oxford, U.K.R.G.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Electrophysiological properties of neocortical neurons in vitro

TL;DR: The array of passive and active membrane behavior observed in the slice suggests that cortical neurons may be differentiated by specific functional properties as well as by their extensive morphological diversity.
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Development of Epileptic Seizures through Brain Stimulation at Low Intensity

TL;DR: This note does not debate this temporary elevation of convulsion threshold but rather emphasizes an equally important phenomenon in which, over a longer period of time, the convulsive threshold is reduced.
Journal ArticleDOI

Cortical cellular phenomena in experimental epilepsy: interictal manifestations.

TL;DR: An intracellular analysis from the involved elements was carried out during the development and course of the organized rhythmical electrographic seizures simultaneously monitored with surface electrodes, finding that some neurons appear to be activated only in the later phases of the seizure.
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