Neurobiology of Disease (Jul 2021)

Long-term seizure dynamics are determined by the nature of seizures and the mutual interactions between them

  • Jan Kudlacek,
  • Jan Chvojka,
  • Vojtech Kumpost,
  • Barbora Hermanovska,
  • Antonin Posusta,
  • John G.R. Jefferys,
  • Matias I. Maturana,
  • Ondrej Novak,
  • Mark J. Cook,
  • Jakub Otahal,
  • Jaroslav Hlinka,
  • Premysl Jiruska

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 154
p. 105347

Abstract

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The seemingly random and unpredictable nature of seizures is a major debilitating factor for people with epilepsy. An increasing body of evidence demonstrates that the epileptic brain exhibits long-term fluctuations in seizure susceptibility, and seizure emergence seems to be a consequence of processes operating over multiple temporal scales. A deeper insight into the mechanisms responsible for long-term seizure fluctuations may provide important information for understanding the complex nature of seizure genesis. In this study, we explored the long-term dynamics of seizures in the tetanus toxin model of temporal lobe epilepsy. The results demonstrate the existence of long-term fluctuations in seizure probability, where seizures form clusters in time and are then followed by seizure-free periods. Within each cluster, seizure distribution is non-Poissonian, as demonstrated by the progressively increasing inter-seizure interval (ISI), which marks the approaching cluster termination. The lengthening of ISIs is paralleled by: increasing behavioral seizure severity, the occurrence of convulsive seizures, recruitment of extra-hippocampal structures and the spread of electrographic epileptiform activity outside of the limbic system. The results suggest that repeated non-convulsive seizures obey the ‘seizures-beget-seizures’ principle, leading to the occurrence of convulsive seizures, which decrease the probability of a subsequent seizure and, thus, increase the following ISI. The cumulative effect of repeated convulsive seizures leads to cluster termination, followed by a long inter-cluster period. We propose that seizures themselves are an endogenous factor that contributes to long-term fluctuations in seizure susceptibility and their mutual interaction determines the future evolution of disease activity.

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