Gilat E, Kadar T, Levy A, Rabinovitz I, Cohen G, Kapon Y, Sahar R, Brandeis R
Department of Pharmacology, Israel Institute for Biological Research, Ness Ziona, 74100 Israel.
Toxicol Appl Pharmacol. 2005 Nov 15;209(1):74-85. doi: 10.1016/j.taap.2005.03.007.
Centrally mediated seizures and convulsions are common consequences of exposure to organophosphates (OPs). These seizures rapidly progress to status epilepticus (SE) and contribute to profound brain injury. Effective management of these seizures is critical for minimization of brain damage. Nasal application of midazolam (1.5 mg/kg) after 5 min of sarin-induced electrographic seizure activity (EGSA) ameliorated EGSA and convulsive behavior (238 +/- 90 s). Identical treatment after 30 min was not sufficient to ameliorate ECoG paradoxical activity and convulsive behavior. Nasal midazolam (1.5 mg/kg), together with scopolamine (1 mg/kg, im) after 5 min of EGSA, exerted a powerful and rapid anticonvulsant effect (53 +/- 10 s). Delaying the same treatment to 30 min of EGSA leads to attenuation of paroxysmal ECoG activity in all cases but total cessation of paroxysmal activity was not observed in most animals tested. Cognitive tests utilizing the Morris Water Maze demonstrated that nasal midazolam alone or together with scopolamine (im), administered after 5 min of convulsions, abolished the effect of sarin on learning. Both these treatments, when given after 30 min of convulsions, only decreased the sarin-induced learning impairments. Whereas rats which were not subject to the anticonvulsant agents did not show any memory for the platform location, both treatments (at 5 min as well as at 30 min) completely abolished the memory deficits. Both treatments equally blocked the impairment of reversal learning when given at 5 min. However, when administered after 30 min, midazolam alone reversed the impairments in reversal learning, while midazolam with scopolamine did not. Rats exposed to sarin and treated with the therapeutic regimen with the exclusion of midazolam exhibited severe brain lesions that encountered the hippocampus, pyriform cortex, and thalamus. Nasal midazolam at 5 min prevented brain damage, while delaying the midazolam treatment to 30 min of EGSA resulted in brain damage. The addition of scopolamine to midazolam did not alter the above observation. In summary, nasal midazolam treatment briefly after initiation of OP-induced seizure leads to cessation of EGSA and prevented brain lesions and behavioral deficiencies in the rat model.
中枢介导的癫痫发作和惊厥是接触有机磷酸酯(OPs)后的常见后果。这些癫痫发作会迅速发展为癫痫持续状态(SE),并导致严重的脑损伤。有效控制这些癫痫发作对于将脑损伤降至最低至关重要。在沙林诱导的脑电图癫痫活动(EGSA)5分钟后经鼻给予咪达唑仑(1.5毫克/千克)可改善EGSA和惊厥行为(238±90秒)。在30分钟后进行相同治疗不足以改善脑电图矛盾活动和惊厥行为。在EGSA 5分钟后,经鼻给予咪达唑仑(1.5毫克/千克)并联合东莨菪碱(1毫克/千克,肌肉注射)可产生强大而迅速的抗惊厥作用(53±10秒)。将相同治疗延迟至EGSA 30分钟会导致所有情况下阵发性脑电图活动减弱,但在大多数受试动物中未观察到阵发性活动完全停止。利用莫里斯水迷宫进行的认知测试表明,在惊厥5分钟后单独经鼻给予咪达唑仑或联合东莨菪碱(肌肉注射)可消除沙林对学习的影响。这两种治疗方法在惊厥30分钟后给予时,仅能减轻沙林诱导的学习障碍。未接受抗惊厥药物治疗的大鼠对平台位置没有任何记忆,而两种治疗方法(在5分钟和30分钟时)均完全消除了记忆缺陷。在5分钟时给予这两种治疗方法对反转学习障碍的阻断效果相同。然而,在30分钟后给予时,单独使用咪达唑仑可逆转反转学习障碍,而联合东莨菪碱的咪达唑仑则不能。暴露于沙林并接受排除咪达唑仑的治疗方案的大鼠出现了累及海马体、梨状皮质和丘脑的严重脑损伤。在5分钟时经鼻给予咪达唑仑可预防脑损伤,而将咪达唑仑治疗延迟至EGSA 30分钟则会导致脑损伤。在咪达唑仑中加入东莨菪碱并未改变上述观察结果。总之,在OP诱导的癫痫发作开始后不久经鼻给予咪达唑仑治疗可使EGSA停止,并预防大鼠模型中的脑损伤和行为缺陷。