4.7 Article

Epileptogenesis Provoked by Prolonged Experimental Febrile Seizures: Mechanisms and Biomarkers

Journal

JOURNAL OF NEUROSCIENCE
Volume 30, Issue 22, Pages 7484-7494

Publisher

SOC NEUROSCIENCE
DOI: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.0551-10.2010

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Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health [NS35439, R21 NS049618]
  2. EPICURE [LSH-CT-2006-037315]
  3. Fondazione Monzino

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Whether long febrile seizures (FSs) can cause epilepsy in the absence of genetic or acquired predisposing factors is unclear. Having established causality between long FSs and limbic epilepsy in an animal model, we studied here if the duration of the inciting FSs influenced the probability of developing subsequent epilepsy and the severity of the spontaneous seizures. We evaluated if interictal epileptifom activity and/or elevation of hippocampal T2 signal on magnetic resonance image (MRI) provided predictive biomarkers for epileptogenesis, and if the inflammatory mediator interleukin-1 beta (IL-1 beta), an intrinsic element of FS generation, contributed also to subsequent epileptogenesis. We found that febrile status epilepticus, lasting an average of 64 min, increased the severity and duration of subsequent spontaneous seizures compared with FSs averaging 24 min. Interictal activity in rats sustaining febrile status epilepticus was also significantly longer and more robust, and correlated with the presence of hippocampal T2 changes in individual rats. Neither T2 changes nor interictal activity predicted epileptogenesis. Hippocampal levels of IL-1 beta were significantly higher for >24 h after prolonged FSs. Chronically, IL-1 beta levels were elevated only in rats developing spontaneous limbic seizures after febrile status epilepticus, consistent with a role for this inflammatory mediator in epileptogenesis. Establishing seizure duration as an important determinant in epileptogenesis and defining the predictive roles of interictal activity, MRI, and inflammatory processes are of paramount importance to the clinical understanding of the outcome of FSs, the most common neurological insult in infants and children.

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