Seizure Susceptibility Correlates with Brain Injury in Male Mice Treated with Hypothermia after Neonatal Hypoxia-Ischemia

Mcnally, MA; Chavez-Valdez, R; Felling, RJ; Flock, DL; Northington, FJ; Stafstrom, CH

HERO ID

5381747

Reference Type

Journal Article

Year

2019

Language

English

PMID

30820019

HERO ID 5381747
In Press No
Year 2019
Title Seizure Susceptibility Correlates with Brain Injury in Male Mice Treated with Hypothermia after Neonatal Hypoxia-Ischemia
Authors Mcnally, MA; Chavez-Valdez, R; Felling, RJ; Flock, DL; Northington, FJ; Stafstrom, CH
Journal Developmental Neuroscience
Volume 40
Issue 5-6
Page Numbers 576-585
Abstract Hypoxic-ischemic encephalopathy is a common neonatal brain injury associated with significant morbidity and mortality despite the administration of therapeutic hypothermia (TH). Neonatal seizures and subsequent chronic epilepsy are frequent in this patient population and current treatments are partially effective. We used a neonatal murine hypoxia-ischemia (HI) model to test whether the severity of hippocampal and cortical injury predicts seizure susceptibility 8 days after HI and whether TH mitigates this susceptibility. HI at postnatal day 10 (P10) caused hippocampal injury not mitigated by TH in male or female pups. TH did not confer protection against flurothyl seizure susceptibility at P18 in this model. Hippocampal (R2 = 0.33, p = 0.001) and cortical (R2 = 0.33, p = 0.003) injury directly correlated with seizure susceptibility in male but not female pups. Thus, there are sex-specific consequences of neonatal HI on flurothyl seizure susceptibility in a murine neonatal HI model. Further studies are necessary to elucidate the underlying mechanisms of sex dimorphism in seizure susceptibility after neonatal HI.
Doi 10.1159/000496468
Pmid 30820019
Wosid WOS:000477586900016
Is Certified Translation No
Dupe Override No
Is Public Yes
Language Text English
Keyword Hypoxic-ischemic encephalopathy; Neonatal seizures; Sex differences; Seizure susceptibility