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Prolonged febrile seizures in the immature rat model enhance hippocampal excitability long term.

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TLDR
In vivo and in vitro data indicate that hyperthermic seizures in the immature rat model of FSs do not cause spontaneous limbic seizures during adulthood, but they reduce thresholds to chemical convulsants in vivo and electrical stimulation in vitro, indicating persistent enhancement of limbic excitability that may facilitate the development of epilepsy.
Abstract
Febrile seizures (FSs) constitute the most prevalent seizure type during childhood. Whether prolonged FSs alter limbic excitability, leading to spontaneous seizures (temporal lobe epilepsy) during adulthood, has been controversial. Recent data indicate that, in the immature rat model, prolonged FSs induce transient structural changes of some hippocampal pyramidal neurons and long-term functional changes of hippocampal circuitry. However, whether these neuroanatomical and electrophysiological changes promote hippocampal excitability and lead to epilepsy has remained unknown. By using in vivo and in vitro approaches, we determined that prolonged hyperthermia-induced seizures in immature rats caused long-term enhanced susceptibility to limbic convulsants that lasted to adulthood. Thus, extensive hippocampal electroencephalographic and behavioral monitoring failed to demonstrate spontaneous seizures in adult rats that had experienced hyperthermic seizures during infancy. However, 100% of animals developed hippocampal seizures after systemic administration of a low dose of kainate, and most progressed to status epilepticus. Conversely, a minority of normothermic and hyperthermic controls had (brief) seizures, none developing status epilepticus. In vitro, spontaneous epileptiform discharges were not observed in hippocampal-entorhinal cortex slices derived from either control or experimental groups. However, Schaeffer collateral stimulation induced prolonged, self-sustaining, status epilepticus-like discharges exclusively in slices from experimental rats. These data indicate that hyperthermic seizures in the immature rat model of FSs do not cause spontaneous limbic seizures during adulthood. However, they reduce thresholds to chemical convulsants in vivo and electrical stimulation in vitro, indicating persistent enhancement of limbic excitability that may facilitate the development of epilepsy.

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Persistently modified h-channels after complex febrile seizures convert the seizure-induced enhancement of inhibition to hyperexcitability.

TL;DR: A mechanistic resolution to the paradox of persistent lowering of seizure threshold despite an upregulation of inhibition is provided by showing that, in the hippocampus of rats that had febrile seizures, the long-lasting enhancement of the widely expressed intrinsic membrane conductance converts the potentiated synaptic inhibition to hyperexcitability in a frequency-dependent manner.
Journal ArticleDOI

Interleukin-1β Contributes to the Generation of Experimental Febrile Seizures

TL;DR: It is indicated that IL‐1β signaling contributes critically to fever‐induced hyperexcitability underlying FS, constituting a potential target for their prevention.
Journal ArticleDOI

Animal models of epilepsy: use and limitations

TL;DR: The quest for seizure mechanisms can provide insights into overall brain functions and consciousness, and animal models of epilepsy will continue to promote the progress of both epilepsy and neurophysiology research.
Journal ArticleDOI

Effects of seizures on developmental processes in the immature brain

TL;DR: Basic developmental principles obtained from animal studies are presented and the long-lasting consequences of epilepsy are examined to determine how neuronal activity modulates the main steps of cortical formation.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Limbic seizure and brain damage produced by kainic acid: Mechanisms and relevance to human temporal lobe epilepsy

Yehezkel Ben-Ari
- 01 Feb 1985 - 
TL;DR: This work has shown that kainate-like endotoxins pose a novel threat to the integrity of the immune system through their role as a “spatially aggregating substance” in the response of epilepsy.
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Synchronization of neuronal activity in hippocampus by individual GABAergic interneurons

TL;DR: It is demonstrated that individual GABAergic interneurons can effectively phase spontaneous firing and subthreshold oscillations in hippocampal pyramidal cells at 4–7 Hz, and this GABAergic mechanism is sufficient to synchronize the firing of pyramsidal cells.
Journal ArticleDOI

Characteristics of medial temporal lobe epilepsy: I. Results of history and physical examination

TL;DR: There is a very strong relationship between complicated febrile seizures during early childhood or infancy and the later development of medial temporal lobe epilepsy, which can be a progressive disease as evidenced by silent intervals and progressive elaboration of seizures.
Journal ArticleDOI

Neurochemical aspects of the ontogenesis of gabanergic neurons in the rat brain

TL;DR: Examination of various biochemical characteristics of the GABAnergic nervous system in the rat brain was made between 15 days of gestation and adulthood, finding the rise in the density of the apparent postsynaptic GABA receptor after 8 days postpartum correlates best with the increase in the activity of glutamic acid decarboxylase, a presynaptic marker.
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Electrographic, clinical and pathological alterations following systemic administration of kainic acid, bicuculline or pentetrazole: metabolic mapping using the deoxyglucose method with special reference to the pathology of epilepsy

TL;DR: The pathological alterations (signs of degeneration) were almost exclusively present in structures in which there had been a rise in metabolism (in particular the hippocampal formation, lateral septum, amygdala, medial thalamus and claustrum) and there is a remarkable correlation between the electrographic changes and the Rise in metabolism.
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