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Diversity of kindling of limbic seizures after lateral fluid percussion injury in the rat

Abstract

Lateral fluid percussion injury (LFPI) in rats is used to model post-traumatic epilepsy (PTE), with spontaneous seizures occurring in up to ½ of the subjects. Using the kindling paradigm, we examined whether animals without detectable seizures had an altered seizure susceptibility. Male Sprague Dawley rats were subjected to LFPI. Seven-nine months later, spontaneous seizures were monitored for two weeks. Afterward, the animals underwent kindling of basolateral amygdala. For kindling outcomes, the animals were categorized based on the 95% confidence intervals of mean number trials to kindling (ie 3 consecutive stage 4-5 seizures). Spontaneous seizures were detected in 7 out of 24 rats. There was no correlation between the severity of LFPI and either baseline afterdischarge properties, or kindling rates. Six LFPI rats kindled at a rate comparable to those in sham-LFPI (n = 10) and in naïve (n = 7) subjects. Ten LFPI rats kindled faster and 8-slower than controls. None of slow-kindling rats had spontaneous seizures during the prekindling monitoring. During the same period, six fast-kindling and three normal-kindling rats had been seizure-free. Thus, kindling reveals a diversity to seizure susceptibility after LFPI beyond an overt seizure symptomatology, ranging from the increased susceptibility to the increased resistance.

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