Disease-modifying effect of atipamezole in a model of post-traumatic epilepsy

•Atipamezole, improved motor performance after traumatic brain injury (TBI).•Atipamezole reduced seizure susceptibility after TBI.•Atipamezole had no effect on spatial memory performance after TBI.•SR141716A had no-disease modifying effect on TBI outcome. Treatment of TBI remains a major unmet medic...

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Veröffentlicht in:Epilepsy research 2017-10, Vol.136, p.18-34
Hauptverfasser: Nissinen, Jari, Andrade, Pedro, Natunen, Teemu, Hiltunen, Mikko, Malm, Tarja, Kanninen, Katja, Soares, Joana I., Shatillo, Olena, Sallinen, Jukka, Ndode-Ekane, Xavier Ekolle, Pitkänen, Asla
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:•Atipamezole, improved motor performance after traumatic brain injury (TBI).•Atipamezole reduced seizure susceptibility after TBI.•Atipamezole had no effect on spatial memory performance after TBI.•SR141716A had no-disease modifying effect on TBI outcome. Treatment of TBI remains a major unmet medical need, with 2.5 million new cases of traumatic brain injury (TBI) each year in Europe and 1.5 million in the USA. This single-center proof-of-concept preclinical study tested the hypothesis that pharmacologic neurostimulation with proconvulsants, either atipamezole, a selective α2-adrenoceptor antagonist, or the cannabinoid receptor 1 antagonist SR141716A, as monotherapy would improve functional recovery after TBI. A total of 404 adult Sprague-Dawley male rats were randomized into two groups: sham-injured or lateral fluid-percussion–induced TBI. The rats were treated with atipamezole (started at 30min or 7 d after TBI) or SR141716A (2min or 30min post-TBI) for up to 9 wk. Total follow-up time was 14 wk after treatment initiation. Outcome measures included motor (composite neuroscore, beam-walking) and cognitive performance (Morris water-maze), seizure susceptibility, spontaneous seizures, and cortical and hippocampal pathology. All injured rats exhibited similar impairment in the neuroscore and beam-walking tests at 2 d post-TBI. Atipamezole treatment initiated at either 30min or 7 d post-TBI and continued for 9 wk via subcutaneous osmotic minipumps improved performance in both the neuroscore and beam-walking tests, but not in the Morris water-maze spatial learning and memory test. Atipamezole treatment initiated at 7 d post-TBI also reduced seizure susceptibility in the pentylenetetrazol test 14 wk after treatment initiation, although it did not prevent the development of epilepsy. SR141716A administered as a single dose at 2min post-TBI or initiated at 30min post-TBI and continued for 9 wk had no recovery-enhancing or antiepileptogenic effects. Mechanistic studies to assess the α2-adrenoceptor subtype specificity of the disease-modifying effects of atipametzole revealed that genetic ablation of α2A-noradrenergic receptor function in Adra2A mice carrying an N79P point mutation had antiepileptogenic effects after TBI. On the other hand, blockade of α2C-adrenoceptors using the receptor subtype-specific antagonist ORM-12741 had no favorable effects on the post-TBI outcome. Finally, to assess whether regulation of the post-injury inflammatory response by atipamet
ISSN:0920-1211
1872-6844
DOI:10.1016/j.eplepsyres.2017.07.005