4.5 Article

Low blood glucose precipitates spike-and-wave activity in genetically predisposed animals

Journal

EPILEPSIA
Volume 52, Issue 1, Pages 115-120

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/j.1528-1167.2010.02911.x

Keywords

Absence seizures; Animal models; Spike and wave discharge; Glucose; Insulin; Seizure precipitant; Genetic susceptibility

Funding

  1. National Health and Medical Research Council of Australia [400121, 628520]
  2. Australian Research Council [FT0990628]

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P>Purpose: Absence epilepsies are common, with a major genetic contribution to etiology. Certain environmental factors can influence absence occurrence but a complete understanding of absence precipitation is lacking. Herein we investigate if lowering blood glucose increases spike-wave activity in mouse models with varying seizure susceptibility. Methods: Three mouse models were used: an absence seizure model based on the knockin of a human GABA(A)gamma 2(R43Q) mutation (DBA(R43Q)), the spike-wave discharge (SWD)-prone DBA/2J strain, and the seizure resistant C57Bl/6 strain. Electrocorticography (ECoG) studies were recorded to determine SWDs during hypoglycemia induced by insulin or overnight fasting. Key Findings: An insulin-mediated reduction in blood glucose levels to 4 mm (c.a. 40% reduction) was sufficient to double SWD occurrence in the DBA(R43Q) model and in the SWD-prone DBA/2J mouse strain. Larger reductions in blood glucose further increased SWDs in both these models. However, even with large reductions in blood glucose, no discharges were observed in the seizure-resistant C57Bl/6 mouse strain. Injection of glucose reversed the impact of insulin on SWDs in the DBA(R43Q) model, supporting a reduction in blood glucose as the modulating influence. Overnight fasting reduced blood glucose levels to 4.5 mm (c.a. 35% reduction) and, like insulin, caused a doubling in occurrence of SWDs. Significance: Low blood glucose can precipitate SWDs in genetically predisposed animal models and should be considered as a potential environmental risk factor in patients with absence epilepsy.

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