4.7 Article

Antagonism of peripheral inflammation reduces the severity of status epilepticus

Journal

NEUROBIOLOGY OF DISEASE
Volume 33, Issue 2, Pages 171-181

Publisher

ACADEMIC PRESS INC ELSEVIER SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1016/j.nbd.2008.10.002

Keywords

Blood-brain barrier; Cerebrovascular function; Epilepsy; Inflammation; Anti-inflammatory therapy; New drug targets; T lymphocytes

Categories

Funding

  1. NIH [RO1 NS43284, RO1 NS38195]

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Status epilepticus (SE) is one of the most serious manifestations of epilepsy. Systemic inflammation and damage of blood-brain barrier (BBB) are etiologic cofactors in the pathogenesis of pilocarpine SE while acute osmotic disruption of the BBB is sufficient to elicit seizures. Whether an inflammatory-vascular-BBB mechanism could apply to the lithium-pilocarpine model is unknown. LiCl facilitated seizures induced by loud-dose pilocarpine by activation of circulating T-lymphocytes and mononuclear cells. Serum IL-1 beta levels increased and BBB damage occurred concurrently to increased theta EEG activity. These events occurred prior to SE induced by cholinergic exposure. SE was elicited by lithium and pilocarpine irrespective of their sequence of administration supporting a common pathogenetic mechanism. Since IL-1 beta is an etiologic trigger for BBB breakdown and its serum elevation occurs before onset of SE early after LiCl and pilocarpine injections, we tested the hypothesis that intravenous administration of IL-1 receptor antagonists (IL-1ra) may prevent pilocarpine-induced seizures. Animals pre-treated with IL-1ra exhibited significant reduction of SE onset and of BBB damage. Our data support the concept of targeting systemic inflammation and BBB for the prevention of status epilepticus. (C) 2008 Published by Elsevier Inc.

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