Acute Non-Convulsive Status Epilepticus after Experimental Traumatic Brain Injury in Rats.
antiepileptic drugs
epileptogenesis
lateral fluid-percussion injury
seizure
video-EEG monitoring
Journal
Journal of neurotrauma
ISSN: 1557-9042
Titre abrégé: J Neurotrauma
Pays: United States
ID NLM: 8811626
Informations de publication
Date de publication:
06 2019
06 2019
Historique:
pubmed:
14
12
2018
medline:
27
10
2020
entrez:
14
12
2018
Statut:
ppublish
Résumé
Severe traumatic brain injury (TBI) induces seizures or status epilepticus (SE) in 20-30% of patients during the acute phase. We hypothesized that severe TBI induced with lateral fluid-percussion injury (FPI) triggers post-impact SE. Adult Sprague-Dawley male rats were anesthetized with isoflurane and randomized into the sham-operated experimental control or lateral FPI-induced severe TBI groups. Electrodes were implanted right after impact or sham-operation, then video-electroencephalogram (EEG) monitoring was started. In addition, video-EEG was recorded from naïve rats. During the first 72 h post-TBI, injured rats had seizures that were intermingled with other epileptiform EEG patterns typical to non-convulsive SE, including occipital intermittent rhythmic delta activity, lateralized or generalized periodic discharges, spike-and-wave complexes, poly-spikes, poly-spike-and-wave complexes, generalized continuous spiking, burst suppression, or suppression. Almost all (98%) of the electrographic seizures were recorded during 0-72 h post-TBI (23.2 ± 17.4 seizures/rat). Mean latency from the impact to the first electrographic seizure was 18.4 ± 15.1 h. Mean seizure duration was 86 ± 57 sec. Analysis of high-resolution videos indicated that only 41% of electrographic seizures associated with behavioral abnormalities, which were typically subtle (Racine scale 1-2). Fifty-nine percent of electrographic seizures did not show any behavioral manifestations. In most of the rats, epileptiform EEG patterns began to decay spontaneously on Days 5-6 after TBI. Interestingly, also a few sham-operated and naïve rats had post-operation seizures, which were not associated with EEG background patterns typical to non-convulsive SE seen in TBI rats. To summarize, our data show that lateral FPI-induced TBI results in non-convulsive SE with subtle behavioral manifestations; this explains why it has remained undiagnosed until now. The lateral FPI model provides a novel platform for assessing the mechanisms of acute symptomatic non-convulsive SE and for testing treatments to prevent post-injury SE in a clinically relevant context.
Identifiants
pubmed: 30543155
doi: 10.1089/neu.2018.6107
pmc: PMC6551998
doi:
Types de publication
Journal Article
Research Support, N.I.H., Extramural
Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
Langues
eng
Sous-ensembles de citation
IM
Pagination
1890-1907Subventions
Organisme : NINDS NIH HHS
ID : U54 NS100064
Pays : United States
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