4.5 Article

The natural history and treatment of epilepsy in a murine model of tuberous sclerosis

Journal

EPILEPSIA
Volume 48, Issue 8, Pages 1470-1476

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/j.1528-1167.2007.01110.x

Keywords

seizure; antiepileptic drug; tuberous sclerosis complex

Funding

  1. NINDS NIH HHS [R01 NS 056872, K02 NS045583, K02 NS 045583, R01 NS056872] Funding Source: Medline

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Purpose: Patients with tuberous sclerosis complex (TSC) often have severe epilepsy that is intractable to available therapies. The development of novel treatments for epilepsy in TSC would benefit greatly from a suitable animal model, but most animal models of TSC to date have few reported neurological abnormalities, such as epilepsy. We previously described a novel model of TSC, due to conditional inactivation of the Tsc1 gene in glia (Tsc1(GFAP)CKO mice), in which mice develop epilepsy and premature death. Here, we characterize the natural history of the epilepsy in Tsc1(GFAP)CKO mice in more detail and report acute effects of treatment with standard antiepileptic drugs on seizures in these mice. Methods: Video-EEG recordings were obtained from Tsc1(GFAP)CKO mice on a weekly basis, starting at 4 weeks of age until death, to monitor progression of interictal EEG abnormalities and seizures. In separate experiments, Tsc1(GFAP)CKO mice were monitored for interictal EEG abnormalities and seizures before and during treatment with phenobarbital, phenytoin, or saline. Results: Tsc1(GFAP)CKO mice developed seizures around 4-6 weeks of age and subsequently had progressive worsening of the interictal EEG background and seizure frequency over a month, culminating in death. Treatment with phenobarbital or phenytoin caused a reduction in seizure frequency, but did not improve EEG background or prevent death. Conclusions: Tsc1(GFAP)CKO mice develop progressive epilepsy. Acute treatment with standard antiepileptic drugs suppresses seizures in these mice, but does not affect long-term prognosis. Tsc1(GFAP)CKO mice represent a good model to test other drugs that may have true antiepileptogenic actions in TSC.

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