Volume 17, Number 14,
Issue of July 15, 1997
pp. 5581-5590
Copyright ©1997 Society for Neuroscience
Repeated Generalized Seizures Induce Time-Dependent Changes in
the Behavioral Seizure Response Independent of Continued Seizure
Induction
Received Aug. 23, 1996; revised April 21, 1997; accepted April 24, 1997.
Gary M. Samoriski and
Craig
D. Applegate
Program in Neuroscience and The Comprehensive Epilepsy Program,
University of Rochester School of Medicine and Dentistry, Rochester,
New York 14642
This study examined both the acute and long-lasting changes in
seizure susceptibility that occur in response to the repeated induction
of generalized seizure activity. Daily flurothyl-induced generalized
clonic seizures resulted in a progressive decrease in both the
generalized seizure threshold and the latency to the first myoclonic
jerk. The threshold reduction was significant as early as the second
trial and was maximal by trial 5. However, a minimum of eight seizures
was necessary for the maximal reduction to be long-lasting. The present
study also examined the effects of the number of seizures and the
duration of the stimulation-free interval on the type of generalized
seizure expressed. During the induction phase of the experiment, only
generalized clonic seizures ("forebrain seizures") were expressed.
If, however, the animal was retested after a 1, 2, 3, or 4 week
stimulation-free interval, a progressive increase in both the
proportion of animals expressing "brainstem seizure" behaviors and
the median seizure score was observed. The progression of
flurothyl-induced generalized seizure behaviors was significantly
altered if (1) a minimum of eight generalized clonic seizures had been
expressed, and (2) a minimum of a 2 week stimulation-free interval
followed. Fewer generalized clonic seizures failed to reliably produce
changes in seizure phenotype, even after extended stimulus-free
intervals. These data indicate that specific kindling processes are
initiated during the interval of repeated seizure induction and evolve
in the absence of continued seizure induction. Furthermore, these mechanisms of epileptogenesis were found to be manifest predominantly as a change in the seizure phenotype expressed and to proceed independent of changes in the generalized seizure threshold.
Key words:
epileptogenesis;
generalized clonic seizure;
generalized
tonic seizure;
kindling;
flurothyl;
mouse