Cognitive impairment following status epilepticus and recurrent seizures during early development: support for the "two-hit hypothesis"

Hoffmann, AF; Zhao, Q; Holmes, GL

HERO ID

5381708

Reference Type

Journal Article

Year

2004

Language

English

PMID

15582835

HERO ID 5381708
In Press No
Year 2004
Title Cognitive impairment following status epilepticus and recurrent seizures during early development: support for the "two-hit hypothesis"
Authors Hoffmann, AF; Zhao, Q; Holmes, GL
Journal Epilepsy & Behavior
Volume 5
Issue 6
Page Numbers 873-877
Abstract Prolonged seizures in immature rats result in minimal behavioral consequences when the animals are studied later in life. Likewise, early-onset seizures are associated with minimal morphological changes. However, it is known that seizures early in life result in changes in the brain that make it more vulnerable to subsequent seizure-induced injury (the so-called two-hit hypothesis). Whether this heightened vulnerability occurs immediately after the first seizure is not known. In this study, immature rats were exposed to status epilepticus (SE) followed by a series of 25 flurothyl-induced seizures, SE alone, 25 flurothyl-induced seizures alone, or no seizures. Rats exposed to SE and flurothyl seizures performed significantly poorer in the water maze 2 weeks following the last seizure compared with the other groups. No histological lesions were seen in any of the four groups. This study suggests that SE renders the immature brain vulnerable to further seizure-induced injury and this enhanced vulnerability occurs very quickly after the SE.
Doi 10.1016/j.yebeh.2004.09.005
Pmid 15582835
Wosid WOS:000225874100012
Is Certified Translation No
Dupe Override No
Is Public Yes
Language Text English