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1.
The continuous Morlet wavelet transform was used for the analysis of the time-frequency pattern of spike-wave discharges (SWD) as can be recorded in a genetic animal model of absence epilepsy (rats of the WAG/Rij strain). We developed a new wavelet transform that allows to obtain the time-frequency dynamics of the dominating rhythm during the discharges. SWD were analyzed pre- and post-administration of certain drugs. SWD recorded predrug demonstrate quite uniform time-frequency dynamics of the dominant rhythm. The beginning of the discharge has a short period with the highest frequency value (up to 15 Hz). Then the frequency decreases to 7-9 Hz and frequency modulation occurs during the discharge in this range with a period of 0.5-0.7 s. Specific changes of SWD time-frequency dynamics were found after the administration of psychoactive drugs, addressing different brain mediator and modulator systems. Short multiple SWDs appeared under low (0.5 mg/kg) doses of haloperidol, they are characterized by a fast frequency decrease to 5-6 Hz at the end of every discharge. The frequency of the dominant frequency of SWD was not stable in long lasting SWD after 1.0 mg/kg or more haloperidol: then two periodicities were found. Long lasting SWD seen after the administration of vigabatrin showed a stable frequency of the discharge. The EEG after Ketamin showed a distinct 5 s quasiperiodicity. No clear changes of time-frequency dynamics of SWD were found after perilamine. It can be concluded that the use of the modified Morlet wavelet transform allows to describe significant parameters of the dynamics in the time-frequency domain of the dominant rhythm of SWD that were not previously detected.  相似文献   

2.
PURPOSE: The kindling model in rats with genetic absence epilepsy is suitable for studying mechanisms involved in the propagation and generalization of seizure activity in the convulsive and nonconvulsive components of epilepsy. In the present study, we compared the amygdala kindling rate and afterdischarge characteristics of the nonepileptic Wistar control rat with a well-validated model of absence epilepsy, the WAG/Rij rat, and demonstrated the effect of amygdala kindling on spike-and-wave discharges (SWDs) in the WAG/Rij group. METHODS: Electrodes were stereotaxically implanted into the basolateral amygdala of rats for stimulation and recording and into the cortex for recording. After a recovery period, the animals were stimulated at their afterdischarge thresholds. EEG was recorded to analyze SWDs and afterdischarge durations. The seizure severity was evaluated by using Racine's 5-stage scale. RESULTS: All nonepileptic control and four of seven WAG/Rij animals reached a stage 5 seizure state, whereas three animals failed to reach stage 3, 4, or 5 and stayed at stage 2 after application of 30 stimulations. Interestingly, WAG/Rij rats, resistant to kindling, demonstrated a significantly longer duration of SWDs on the first day of the experiment before kindling stimulation than did the kindled WAG/Rij animals. Additionally, the cumulative total duration and the number of SWDs after the kindling stimulation were statistically increased compared with SWDs before kindling stimulation. CONCLUSIONS: The results of our study demonstrate that the progress of amygdala kindling is changed in rats with genetic absence epilepsy, perhaps as a consequence of the hundreds of daily SWDs.  相似文献   

3.
Purpose:   The WAG/Rij strain of rats, a well-established model for absence epilepsy, has comorbidity for depression. These rats exhibit depression-like behavioral symptoms such as increased immobility in the forced swimming test and decreased sucrose intake and preference (anhedonia). These depression-like behavioral symptoms are evident in WAG/Rij rats, both at 3–4 and 5–6 months of age, with a tendency to aggravate in parallel with an increase in seizure duration. Here we investigated whether the behavioral symptoms of depression could be prevented by the suppression of absence seizures.
Methods:   Ethosuximide (ETX; 300 mg/kg/day, in the drinking water) was chronically applied to WAG/Rij rats from postnatal day 21 until 5 months. Behavioral tests were done before the cessation of the treatment. Electroencephalography (EEG) recordings were made before and after cessation of treatment to measure seizure severity at serial time-points.
Results:   ETX-treated WAG/Rij rats exhibited no symptoms of depression-like behavior in contrast to untreated WAG/Rij rats of the same age. Moreover, treated WAG/Rij rats did not differ from control age-matched Wistar rats. ETX treatment led to almost complete suppression of spike-wave discharges (SWDs) in 5–6 month old WAG/Rij rats. Discontinuation of chronic treatment was accompanied by a gradual emergence of SWDs; however, a persistent reduction in seizure activity was still present 47 days after discontinuation of the chronic treatment.
Discussion:   The results suggest that seizure activity is necessary for the expression of depression-like behavioral symptoms and confirm that epileptogenesis can be prevented by early and chronic treatment.  相似文献   

4.
Summary:  The involvement of the thalamus in limbic epileptogenesis has recently drawn attention to the connectivity between the nuclei of the thalamus and limbic structures. Thalamo-limbic circuits are thought to regulate limbic seizure activity whereas thalamocortical circuits are involved in the expression and generation of spike-and-wave discharges (SWDs) in the absence epilepsy models. Genetic Absence Epilepsy Rats From Strasbourg (GAERS) and WAG/Rij (Wistar Albino Glaxo from Rijswijk) are well-defined genetic animal models of absence epilepsy. We aimed to examine the duration of behavioral changes in the kindling process and the relation of SWD activity to the kindling progress in the GAERS and WAG/Rij animals. Electrodes were stereotaxically implanted into the basolateral amygdala and the cortex of rats for stimulation and recording. The animals were stimulated at the threshold for producing afterdischarges. EEG was recorded to analyze SWDs and afterdischarge durations. The seizure severity was evaluated using Racine's 5-stage scale. None of the GAERS animals reached stage 3, 4, or 5 after application of 30 stimulations. The WAG/Rij animals showed different rate of kindling, therefore they were further categorized into the kindling-resistant, slow-kindled, and rapid-kindled groups. The kindling-resistant animals demonstrated a significantly longer duration of SWDs on the first day of the experiment before kindling stimulation and shorter duration of afterdischarge than did the kindled WAG/Rij animals. Behavioral durations at stage 2 were longer in kindled Wistar and WAG/Rij animals compared to kindling-resistant WAG/Rij and GAERS. These results suggest that mechanisms involved in the generation of SWDs act as a counterbalance to the excitability induced by kindling.  相似文献   

5.
Spike-wave discharges (SWDs) characterizing absence epilepsy appear in closely packed aggregated sequences, which gave rise to the name "pyknolepsy" for this disease. In WAG/Rij rats, genetically prone to absence epilepsy, spontaneous SWDs seem to occur in clusters as well. Here, we aimed to quantify the seizures' clusters. SWDs sequences were extracted from long-term (complete estrous cycle) EEG recordings of adult female WAG/Rij rats. Spectral characteristics and half-decay time of autocorrelation functions (AC-tau) were calculated for time series of i(SWD) (proportion of time occupied by spike-wave activity), measured for subsequent periods. The clusters were characterized by means of AC-tau calculated for time series of i(SWD). The absence seizures were indeed clustered in a minute range. The clustering had a non-periodical character, since no significant and consistent periodicity was found in the minute range. AC-tau correlated positively with propensity of SWDs: i.e. the aggravation of absence epilepsy led to longer sequences of paroxysms and thus to a less random distribution. AC-tau was not sensitive to various phases of the estrous cycle, but was larger in the dark than in the light periods. We suggest that AC-tau can be used to quantify aggregation of epileptic events in the search for physiological basis of its temporal clustering.  相似文献   

6.
PurposeThis study investigated the effects of cortical dysplasia (CD) on electrophysiology and blood-brain barrier (BBB) permeability in WAG/Rij rats with genetic absence epilepsy.MethodsPregnant WAG/Rij rats were exposed to 145 cGy of gamma-irradiation on embryonic day 17 to induce CD. An electroencephalogram was recorded from cortices subdurally in the offspring of the pregnant animals. Horseradish peroxidase (HRP) was used as determinant of BBB permeability.ResultsA massive tissue loss in the cerebral cortex was seen in WAG/Rij rats with CD (p < 0.05). There was a significant decrease in the number and duration of spike-and-wave discharges (SWDs) and an increase in the frequency of SWDs in the WAG/Rij rats with CD when compared with the properties of SWDs in intact WAG/Rij rats (p < 0.01). Ultrastructurally, the accumulation of HRP reaction products in the cerebral cortex and thalamus of WAG/Rij rats was significantly higher than that of control values (p < 0.01). The accumulation of HRP reaction products in the cerebral cortex and thalamus regions of WAG/Rij rats with CD increased and was higher than that of the control and WAG/Rij animals (p < 0.01).ConclusionIn our study, we showed that number and duration of SWDs decreased and SWD frequency increased in WAG/Rij rats with CD, suggesting a shift in seizure pattern. The association of these alterations with significant loss of cortical thickness and increased BBB permeability to HRP tracer may represent a causal relation of the EEG abnormalities with cerebral structural changes in these animals.  相似文献   

7.
The classical cortico-reticular theory on absence epilepsy suggests that a hyperexcitable cortex is a precondition for the occurrence of absence seizures. In the present experiment seizure thresholds and characteristics of cortical and limbic epileptic afterdischarges (AD) were determined in a comparative cortical stimulation study in young and old adult genetically epileptic WAG/Rij, congenic ACI and Wistar rats. Fifteen-second series of 8Hz stimulation of the sensory-motor cortex were applied in 80- and 180-day-old rats with implanted electrodes. Strain differences were found for the threshold for movements directly induced by stimulation, low frequency spike-and-wave AD, maximal clonic intensity of seizures accompanying direct stimulation, and frequency characteristics of low frequency AD. None of these results agreed with a higher cortical excitability exclusively in WAG/Rij rats. However, WAG/Rij rats had the longest duration of the low frequency AD, and the lowest threshold for the transition to the limbic type of AD. The decrease of this threshold correlated with the increase of the incidence and total duration of spontaneous SWDs in WAG/Rij rats. It is concluded that the elevated excitability of the limbic system or pathways mediating the spread of the epileptic activity into this system can be attributed to the development of genetic epileptic phenotype in WAG/Rij rats.  相似文献   

8.
Spike–wave discharges (SWDs) are thalamocortical oscillations that are often considered to be the EEG correlate of absence seizures. Genetic absence epilepsy rats of Strasbourg (GAERS) and Wistar Albino Glaxo rats from Rijswijk (WAG/Rij) exhibit SWDs and are considered to be genetic animal models of absence epilepsy. However, it has been reported that other rat strains have SWDs, suggesting that SWDs may vary in their prevalence, but all rats have a predisposition for them. This is important because many of these rat strains are used to study temporal lobe epilepsy (TLE), where it is assumed that there is no seizure-like activity in controls. In the course of other studies using the Sprague–Dawley rat, a common rat strain for animal models of TLE, we found that approximately 19% of 2- to 3-month-old naive female Sprague–Dawley rats exhibited SWDs spontaneously during periods of behavioral arrest, which continued for months. Males exhibited SWDs only after 3 months of age, consistent with previous reports (Buzsáki et al., 1990). Housing in atypical lighting during early life appeared to facilitate the incidence of SWDs.Spike–wave discharges were often accompanied by behaviors similar to stage 1–2 limbic seizures. Therefore, additional analyses were made to address the similarity. We observed that the frequency of SWDs was similar to that of hippocampal theta rhythm during exploration for a given animal, typically 7–8 Hz. Therefore, activity in the frequency of theta rhythm that occurs during frozen behavior may not reflect seizures necessarily. Hippocampal recordings exhibited high frequency oscillations (> 250 Hz) during SWDs, suggesting that neuronal activity in the hippocampus occurs during SWDs, i.e., it is not a passive structure. The data also suggest that high frequency oscillations, if rhythmic, may reflect SWDs. We also confirmed that SWDs were present in a common animal model of TLE, the pilocarpine model, using female Sprague–Dawley rats. Therefore, damage and associated changes to thalamic, hippocampal, and cortical neurons do not prevent SWDs, at least in this animal model. The results suggest that it is possible that SWDs occur in rodent models of TLE and that investigators mistakenly assume that they are stage 1–2 limbic seizures. We discuss the implications of the results and ways to avoid the potential problems associated with SWDs in animal models of TLE.  相似文献   

9.
WAG/Rij rats have various types of mid frequency cortico-thalamic oscillations, such as anterior and posterior sleep spindles and two types of spike-wave discharges (SWD). The generalized SWD (type I) preferentially occur at transitions from wake to sleep, type II can be found at the occipital cortex during quite wakefulness. In the present experiment sleep spindles, SWD and sleep cycle characteristics of 6-month-old WAG/Rij rats were studied and compared with those of younger WAG/Rij rats with much less SWD and age-matched control (ACI) rats. EEG recordings were made during the beginning (morning) and end (afternoon) of the light period in these four groups of rats. Quantitative characteristics of SWD, sleep spindles and the sleep cycle were determined. There were strain-related and age-dependent effects in the various cortico-thalamic oscillations, older WAG/Rij had more SWDs than younger WAG/Rij rats (both types I and II) and there were more type I SWDs at the end of the light period compared to the beginning. Large strain, age and time of day effects on the sleep cycle were found. The duration of non-REM sleep and the sleep cycle was shorter in WAG/Rij rats but only at the end of the light period and only in older WAG/Rij rats. It can be concluded that the various phasic events and the length of the sleep cycle are under genetic control, and that the sleep cycle length is also controlled by time of day, age and genetic factors. Non-REM sleep and the sleep cycle are disrupted by absence seizures but only in fragile periods when drowsiness and light slow wave sleep dominate.  相似文献   

10.
A great number of clinical observations show a relationship between epilepsy and depression. Idiopathic generalized epilepsy, including absence epilepsy, has a genetic basis. The review provides evidence that WAG/Rij rats can be regarded as a valid genetic animal model of absence epilepsy with comorbidity of depression. WAG/Rij rats, originally developed as an animal model of human absence epilepsy, share many EEG and behavioral characteristics resembling absence epilepsy in humans, including the similarity of action of various antiepileptic drugs. Behavioral studies indicate that WAG/Rij rats exhibit depression-like symptoms: decreased investigative activity in the open field test, increased immobility in the forced swimming test, and decreased sucrose consumption and preference (anhedonia). In addition, WAG/Rij rats adopt passive strategies in stressful situations, express some cognitive disturbances (reduced long-term memory), helplessness, and submissiveness, inability to make choice and overcome obstacles, which are typical for depressed patients. Elevated anxiety is not a characteristic (specific) feature of WAG/Rij rats; it is a characteristic for only a sub-strain of WAG/Rij rats susceptible to audiogenic seizures. Interestingly, WAG/Rij rats display a hyper-response to amphetamine similar to anhedonic depressed patients. WAG/Rij rats are sensitive only to chronic, but not acute, antidepressant treatments, suggesting that WAG/Rij rats fulfill a criterion of predictive validity for a putative animal model of depression. However, more and different antidepressant drugs still await evaluation. Depression-like behavioral symptoms in WAG/Rij rats are evident at baseline conditions, not exclusively after stress. Experiments with foot-shock stress do not point towards higher stress sensitivity at both behavioral and hormonal levels. However, freezing behavior (coping deficits) and blunted response of 5HT in the frontal cortex to uncontrollable sound stress, increased c-fos expression in the terminal regions of the meso-cortico-limbic brain systems and greater DA response of the mesolimbic system to forced swim stress suggest that WAG/Rij rats are vulnerable to some, but not to all types of stressors. We propose that genetic absence epileptic WAG/Rij rats have behavioral depression-like symptoms, are vulnerable to stress and might represent a model of chronic low-grade depression (dysthymia). Both 5HT and DAergic abnormalities detected in the brain of WAG/Rij rats are involved in modulation of vulnerability to stress and provocation of behavioral depression-like symptoms. The same neurotransmitter systems modulate SWDs as well. Recent studies suggest that the occurrence and repetition of absence seizures are a precipitant of depression-like behavior. Whether the neurochemical changes are primary to depression-like behavioral alterations remains to be determined. In conclusion, the WAG/Rij rats can be considered as a genetic animal model for absence epilepsy with comorbidity of dysthymia. This model can be used to investigate etiology, pathogenic mechanisms and treatment of a psychiatric comorbidity, such as depression in absence epilepsy, to reveal putative genes contributing to comorbid depressive disorder, and to screen novel psychotropic drugs with a selective and/or complex (dual) action on both pathologies.  相似文献   

11.
Peripheral lipopolysaccharide (LPS) injection enhances spike-wave discharges (SWDs) in the genetic rat model of absence epilepsy (Wistar Albino Glaxo/Rijswijk rats: WAG/Rij rats) parallel with the peripheral proinflammatory cytokine responses. The effect of centrally administered LPS on the absence-like epileptic activity is not known, however despite the important differences in inflammatory mechanisms. To examine the effect of centrally administered LPS on the pathological synchronization we intracerebroventricularly (i.c.v.) injected LPS into WAG/Rij rats and measured the number and duration of SWDs. I.c.v. injected LPS increased the number and duration of SWDs for 3 h, thereafter, a decrease in epileptic activity was observed. To further investigate the nature of this effect, a non-steroid anti-inflammatory drug (indomethacin; IND) or a competitive N-methyl-d-aspartate (NMDA) receptor antagonist (2-amino-5-phosphonopentanoic acid; AP5) was injected intraperitoneally (i.p.), preceding the i.c.v. LPS treatment. IND abolished the i.c.v. LPS induced changes in SWDs, while AP5 extended it for 5 h. As control treatments, both IND and AP5 application by themselves decreased the number of SWDs for 2 and 3 h, respectively. Our results show that centrally injected LPS, likewise the peripheral injection, can increase the number and duration of SWDs in the WAG/Rij rat, and the effect invoke inflammatory cytokines as well as excitatory neurotransmitters.  相似文献   

12.
FMRI of brain activation in a genetic rat model of absence seizures   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
Tenney JR  Duong TQ  King JA  Ferris CF 《Epilepsia》2004,45(6):576-582
PURPOSE: EEG-triggered functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) was used to identify areas of brain activation during spontaneous spike-and-wave discharges (SWDs) in an epileptic rat strain under awake conditions. METHODS: Spontaneous absence seizures from 10 WAG/Rij rats were imaged by using T2*-weighted echo planar imaging at 4.7 Tesla. fMRI of the blood-oxygenation-level-dependent (BOLD) signal was triggered based on EEG recordings during imaging. Images obtained during spontaneous SWDs were compared with baseline images. RESULTS: Significant positive BOLD signal changes were apparent in several areas of the cortex and several important nuclei of the thalamus. In addition, no negative BOLD signal was found in any brain area. CONCLUSIONS: We have shown that EEG-triggered BOLD fMRI can be used to detect cortical and thalamic activation related to the spontaneous SWDs that characterize absence seizures in awake WAG/Rij rats. These results draw an anatomic correlation between areas in which increased BOLD signal is found and those in which SWDs have been recorded. In addition, no negative BOLD signal was found to be associated with these spontaneous SWDs. We also demonstrated the technical feasibility of using EEG-triggered fMRI in a genetic rat model of absence seizure.  相似文献   

13.
The role of the somatosensory cortex (SmI) in the incidence of spike-wave discharges (SWDs) was studied in a genetic model of absence epilepsy, WAG/Rij rats. SWDs were recently shown to initiate at the perioral area of the SmI and spread over the cortex and thalamus within a few milliseconds [J. Neurosci. 22 (2002) 1480]. It was hypothesized that functional deactivation of the SmI might reduce the appearance of SWDs. This was tested using unilateral microinjections (1 microl) of 2% lidocaine into the SmI in 13 WAG/Rij rats. Electrocorticogram (ECoG) was recorded in free moving animals from four cortical sites after lidocaine and control (saline) injections. Lidocaine effectively diminished the power of the ECoG spectra mostly in the area surrounding the injection site. Deactivation of the perioral region of the SmI reduced the incidence of SWDs at the entire cortex in both hemispheres. The number of SWDs gradually reached control level at the end of the second hour after injections of lidocaine. These data show that proper functioning of SmI is important for the occurrence of SWDs, supporting the idea that absence seizures might have a focal cortical origin.  相似文献   

14.
Chen SD  Yeh KH  Huang YH  Shaw FZ 《Epilepsia》2011,52(7):1311-1318
Purpose: Generalized absence seizures are characterized by bilateral spike‐wave discharges (SWDs), particularly in the frontoparietal cortical region. In WAG/Rij and GAERS rats with absence epilepsy, recent evidence indicates that SWDs arise first from the lateral somatosensory cortex (LSC), that is, the cortical focus theory. To further understand the cortical role in SWD generation, two epileptic rat models were assessed. Methods: Two models, Long‐Evans rats with spontaneous SWDs and Wistar rats with low‐dose pentylenetetrazol‐induced SWDs (20 mg/kg, i.p.), were administered intracortical or intrathalamic ethosuximide (ESM) or saline. Electroencephalographic recordings were analyzed before and after intracranial microinfusion to evaluate onset, frequency, and duration of SWDs. Key Findings: In both epileptic rat models, ESM in the LSC significantly reduced SWD number, shortened SWD duration, and delayed SWD onset compared to saline. By contrast, ESM in the medial somatosensory cortex had little effect compared to saline. Intrathalamic infusion of ESM only delayed SWD onset. Significance: These findings suggest that the LSC may be essential for the occurrence of SWDs. Our data support the cortical focus theory for the generation of absence seizures.  相似文献   

15.
The cortico-reticular theory of absence epilepsy explains the origin of the bilateral generalized spike-wave discharges (SWDs) characterizing absence seizures via a subcortical pacemaker that is responsible for both normal sleep spindles and pathological SWDs. This pacemaker is the reticular thalamic nucleus (RTN); it produces spontaneous oscillations together with thalamic relay cells and the cortex in an assembled thalamo-cortico-thalamic network. Recently, Meeren et al. [2002. Cortical focus drives widespread corticothalamic networks during spontaneous absence seizures in rats. Journal of Neuroscience 22, 1480-1495.] proposed a focal theory of absence epilepsy based on experimental findings in the WAG/Rij rat, a genetic model of absence epilepsy: the somatosensory cortex contains a focus that initiates a cascade of events that ultimately leads to the occurrence of the bilateral and generalized SWDs if the state of the thalamo-cortical circuitry is favorable. Pharmacological, neurochemical, and neurophysiological data are presented and reviewed here that suggest SWDs might emerge from spontaneous oscillating neurons in the somatosensory cortex during both wakefulness and drowsiness. There is evidence for a variety of neurobiological changes, including a deficient global (parvalbumin) and local GABA-ergic (neurophysiological) system in the neocortex, which may explain why specifically the perioral region of the somatosensory cortex is hyperexcitable and the initiation site of 10Hz oscillations. The neuronal cortical and subcortical circuitry that produces SWDs is part of a large oscillatory system involved in generating cerebral rhythms associated with vibrissal movements. It needs to be established whether similar or comparable pathophysiological processes are also present in humans. Our hypothesis can be readily tested in other models and in humans considering that it is very specific and can be subjected to experimental verification.  相似文献   

16.
Recent findings have challenged the traditional view that the thalamus is the primary driving source of generalized spike-wave discharges (SWDs) characteristic for absence seizures, and indicate a leading role for the cortex instead. In light of this we investigated the effects of thalamic lesions on SWDs and sleep spindles in the WAG/Rij rat, a genetic model of absence epilepsy. EEG was recorded from neocortex and thalamus in freely moving rats, both before and after unilateral thalamic ibotenic acid lesions. Complete unilateral destruction of the reticular thalamic nucleus (RTN) combined with extensive destruction of the thalamocortical relay (TCR) nuclei, resulted in the bilateral abolishment of SWDs and ipsilateral abolishment of sleep spindles. A suppression of both types of thalamocortical oscillations was found when complete or extensive damage to the RTN was combined with minor to moderate damage to the TCR nuclei. Lesions that left the rostral pole of the RTN and part of the TCR nuclei intact, resulted in an ipsilateral suppression of sleep spindles, but a large increase of bilateral SWDs. These findings demonstrate that the thalamus in general and the RTN in particular are a prerequisite for both the typical bilateral 7-11 Hz SWDs and natural occurring sleep spindles in the WAG/Rij rat, but suggest that different intrathalamic subcircuits are involved in the two types of thalamocortical oscillations. Whereas the whole RTN appears to be critical for the generation of sleep spindles, the rostral pole of the RTN seems to be the most likely part that generates SWDs.  相似文献   

17.
The automatic real-time detection of spike-wave discharges (SWDs), the electroencephalographic hallmark of absence seizures, would provide a complementary tool for rapid interference with electrical deep brain stimulation in both patients and animal models. This paper describes a real-time detection algorithm for SWDs based on continuous wavelet analyses in rodents. It has been implemented in a commercially available data acquisition system and its performance experimentally verified. ECoG recordings lasting 5-8h from rats (n=8) of the WAG/Rij strain were analyzed using the real-time SWD detection system. The results indicate that the algorithm is able to detect SWDs within 1s with 100% sensitivity and with a precision of 96.6% for the number of SWDs. Similar results are achieved for 24-h ECoG recordings of two rats. The dependence of accuracy and speed of detection on program settings and attributes of ECoG are discussed. It is concluded that the wavelet based real-time detecting algorithm is well suited for automatic, real-time detection of SWDs in rodents.  相似文献   

18.
PURPOSE: The WAG/Rij rat is among the most appropriate models for the study of spontaneous childhood absence epilepsy, without complex neurologic disorders that are associated with some mouse models for absence epilepsy. Previous studies have allowed the identification of distinct types of spike-wave discharges (SWDs) characterizing seizures in this strain. The purpose of this study was to investigate the genetic basis of electroencephalographic (EEG) properties of SWDs. METHODS: An intercross was derived from WAG/Rij and ACI inbred strains that are known to differ substantially in the number of SWDs. Phenotypic analyses based on 23-h EEG recording in all progenies allowed the quantification of type I and type II SWD phenotypes. A genome-wide scan was performed with 145 microsatellite markers, which were used to test for evidence of genetic linkage to SWD quantitative phenotypes. RESULTS: We were able to map quantitative trait loci independently, controlling type I and type II SWD variables to rat chromosomes 5 and 9. Strongest linkages were obtained for D5Mgh15 and total duration of type II SWD (lod, 3.64) and for D9Rat103 and the average duration of type I SWD (lod, 3.91). These loci were denoted T2swd/wag and T1swd/wag, respectively. CONCLUSIONS: The independent genetic control of type I and type II SWDs underlines the complexity of the molecular mechanisms participating in SWDs. The identification of these genetic loci represents an important step in our fundamental knowledge of the architecture of SWDs and may provide new insights for resolving the genetic heterogeneity of absence epilepsy.  相似文献   

19.
Due to the involvement of cortical neurons in spike-wave discharge (SWD) initiation, and the contribution of voltage-gated sodium channels (VGSCs) to neuronal firing, we examined alterations in the expression of VGSC mRNA and protein in cortical neurons in the WAG/Rij absence epileptic rat. WAG/Rij rats were compared to age-matched Wistar control rats at 2, 4, and 6 months. Continuous EEG data was recorded, and percent time in SWD was determined. Tissue from different cortical locations from WAG/Rij and Wistar rats was analyzed for VGSC mRNA (by quantitative PCR) and protein (by immunocytochemistry). SWDs increased with age in WAG/Rij rats. mRNA levels for sodium channels Nav1.1 and Nav1.6, but not Nav1.2, were found to be up-regulated selectively within the facial somatosensory cortex (at AP +0.0, ML +6.0 mm). Protein levels for Nav1.1 and Nav1.6 were up-regulated in layer II–IV cortical neurons in this region of cortex. No significant changes were seen in adjacent regions or other brain areas, including the pre-frontal and occipital cortex. In the WAG/Rij model of absence epilepsy, we identified a specific region of cortex, in layer II–IV neurons on the lateral convexity of the cortex in the facial somatosensory area, where mRNA and protein expression of sodium channel genes Nav1.1 and Nav1.6 are up-regulated. This region of cortex approximately matches the electrophysiologically determined region of seizure onset. Changes in the expression of Nav1.1 and Nav1.6 parallel age-dependent increases in seizure frequency and duration.  相似文献   

20.
Mixed forms of epilepsy in patients are often refractory. Therefore, animal models of comorbid convulsive and nonconvulsive seizure are needed for experimental research. Susceptibility to audiogenic convulsions was studied in a large group of young and adult WAG/Rij rats with inherited absence epilepsy. In 30% of adult rats, sound stimulation provoked audiogenic seizures of moderate intensity. The seizures had two excitation periods separated by a remarkably stable "arrest" of paroxysmal movements. Up to 20% of young WAG/Rij rats were also susceptible to audiogenic seizures, with a longer latency, lower intensity, and more simple seizure patterns. No difference in manifestations of spike-wave discharges was observed between the WAG/Rij rats with and without audiogenic seizures. This subpopulation of WAG/Rij rats genetically predisposed to absence and audiogenic seizures is proposed as an animal model suitable for investigation of basal mechanisms and pharmacological profiles of this mixed form of epilepsy.  相似文献   

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