Effects of neonatal seizures on subsequent seizure-induced brain injury

Schmid, R; Tandon, P; Stafstrom, CE; Holmes, GL

HERO ID

5381639

Reference Type

Journal Article

Year

1999

Language

English

PMID

10563624

HERO ID 5381639
In Press No
Year 1999
Title Effects of neonatal seizures on subsequent seizure-induced brain injury
Authors Schmid, R; Tandon, P; Stafstrom, CE; Holmes, GL
Journal Neurology
Volume 53
Issue 8
Page Numbers 1754-1761
Abstract <strong>BACKGROUND: </strong>Although seizures are very common in neonates and are often the harbinger of poor neurologic outcome, there is controversy regarding the degree of brain damage induced by seizures during early development. Here, we evaluated the effect of neonatal seizures on subsequent brain injury induced by status epilepticus.<br /><br /><strong>METHODS: </strong>Twenty-five seizures were induced by the inhalant flurothyl in neonatal rats during the first 5 days of life. Flurothyl reliably produced generalized seizures with concomitant electroencephalographic changes and a low mortality rate. During adolescence or early adulthood, animals were subjected to status epilepticus using either kainic acid or perforant path stimulation.<br /><br /><strong>RESULTS: </strong>Although flurothyl-induced neonatal seizures did not cause cell death, animals that had neonatal seizures had significantly more severe brain injury after both kainic acid and perforant path stimulation than did animals without a history of neonatal seizures.<br /><br /><strong>CONCLUSIONS: </strong>Neonatal seizures increase the susceptibility of the developing brain to subsequent seizure-induced injury.
Doi 10.1212/WNL.53.8.1754
Pmid 10563624
Wosid WOS:000083561300027
Is Certified Translation No
Dupe Override No
Is Public Yes
Language Text English