Effect of lamotrigine treatment on epileptogenesis: an experimental study in rat
Prevention of epileptogenesis in patients with acute brain damaging insults like status epilepticus (SE) is a major challenge. We investigated whether lamotrigine (LTG) treatment started during SE is antiepileptogenic or disease-modifying. To mimic a clinical study design, LTG treatment (20 mg/kg) w...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Epilepsy research 2004-02, Vol.58 (2), p.119-132 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Prevention of epileptogenesis in patients with acute brain damaging insults like status epilepticus (SE) is a major challenge. We investigated whether lamotrigine (LTG) treatment started during SE is antiepileptogenic or disease-modifying. To mimic a clinical study design, LTG treatment (20
mg/kg) was started 2
h after the beginning of electrically induced SE in 14 rats and continued for 11 weeks (20
mg/kg per day for 2 weeks followed by 10
mg/kg per day for 9 weeks). One group of rats (
n=14) was treated with vehicle. Nine non-stimulated rats with vehicle treatment served as controls. Outcome measures were occurrence of epilepsy, severity of epilepsy, and histology (neuronal loss, mossy fiber sprouting). Clinical occurrence of seizures was assessed with 1-week continuous video-electroencephalography monitoring during the 11th (i.e. during treatment) and 14th week (i.e. after drug wash-out) after SE. LTG reduced the number of electrographic seizures during SE to 43% of that in the vehicle group (
P1 per day). The mean frequency of spontaneous seizures, seizure duration, or behavioral severity of seizures did not differ between groups. The severity of hippocampal neuronal damage and density of mossy fiber sprouting were similar. In LTG-treated rats with severe epilepsy, however, the duration of seizures was shorter (34 versus 54
s,
P |
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ISSN: | 0920-1211 1872-6844 |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.eplepsyres.2004.01.001 |