Drexel University College of Medicine, Center for Neuroscience Research, Allegheny-Singer Research Institute, Allegheny General Hospital Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, PA 15212-4772, USA.
Epilepsy Curr. 2010 Jan;10(1):15-20. doi: 10.1111/j.1535-7511.2009.01341.x.
Aged animals have been used by researchers to better understand the differences between the young and the aged brain and how these differences may provide insight into the mechanisms of acute seizures and epilepsy in the elderly. To date, there have been relatively few studies dedicated to the modeling of acute seizures and epilepsy in aged, healthy animals. Inherent challenges to this area of research include the costs associated with the purchase and maintenance of older animals and, at times, the unexpected and potentially confounding comorbidities associated with aging. However, recent studies using a variety of in vivo and in vitro models of acute seizures and epilepsy in mice and rats have built upon early investigations in the field, all of which has provided an expanded vision of seizure generation and epileptogenesis in the aged brain. Results of these studies could potentially translate to new and tailored interventional approaches that limit or prevent the development of epilepsy in the elderly.
研究人员使用老年动物来更好地理解年轻和老年大脑之间的差异,以及这些差异如何为理解老年人急性癫痫发作和癫痫的机制提供线索。迄今为止,专门针对老年健康动物的急性癫痫发作和癫痫模型的研究相对较少。该研究领域存在一些固有挑战,包括购买和维持老年动物的相关成本,以及与衰老相关的意外且可能混淆的合并症。然而,最近使用各种体内和体外急性癫痫发作和癫痫模型的小鼠和大鼠研究在该领域的早期研究基础上更进一步,所有这些研究都为老年大脑中的癫痫发作和癫痫形成提供了更全面的认识。这些研究的结果可能会转化为新的、有针对性的干预方法,从而限制或预防老年人癫痫的发生。