Youngblood Mark W, Chen William C, Mishra Asht M, Enamandram Sheila, Sanganahalli Basavaraju G, Motelow Joshua E, Bai Harrison X, Frohlich Flavio, Gribizis Alexandra, Lighten Alexis, Hyder Fahmeed, Blumenfeld Hal
Department of Neurology, Yale University School of Medicine, 333 Cedar Street, New Haven, CT 06520, USA.
Department of Neurology, Yale University School of Medicine, 333 Cedar Street, New Haven, CT 06520, USA; Core Center for Quantitative Neuroscience with Magnetic Resonance (QNMR), New Haven, CT 06520, USA.
Neuroimage. 2015 Apr 1;109:368-77. doi: 10.1016/j.neuroimage.2014.12.066. Epub 2015 Jan 3.
Absence seizures are transient episodes of impaired consciousness accompanied by 3-4 Hz spike-wave discharge on electroencephalography (EEG). Human functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) studies have demonstrated widespread cortical decreases in the blood oxygen-level dependent (BOLD) signal that may play an important role in the pathophysiology of these seizures. Animal models could provide an opportunity to investigate the fundamental mechanisms of these changes, however they have so far failed to consistently replicate the cortical fMRI decreases observed in human patients. This may be due to important differences between human seizures and animal models, including a lack of cortical development in rodents or differences in the frequencies of rodent (7-8 Hz) and human (3-4 Hz) spike-wave discharges. To examine the possible contributions of these differences, we developed a ferret model that exhibits 3-4 Hz spike-wave seizures in the presence of a sulcated cortex. Measurements of BOLD fMRI and simultaneous EEG demonstrated cortical fMRI increases during and following spike-wave seizures in ferrets. However unlike human patients, significant fMRI decreases were not observed. The lack of fMRI decreases was consistent across seizures of different durations, discharge frequencies, and anesthetic regimes, and using fMRI analysis models similar to human patients. In contrast, generalized tonic-clonic seizures under the same conditions elicited sustained postictal fMRI decreases, verifying that the lack of fMRI decreases with spike-wave was not due to technical factors. These findings demonstrate that 3-4 Hz spike-wave discharge in a sulcated animal model does not necessarily produce fMRI decreases, leaving the mechanism for this phenomenon open for further investigation.
失神发作是意识受损的短暂发作,脑电图(EEG)显示伴有3 - 4Hz的棘慢波放电。人类功能磁共振成像(fMRI)研究表明,血氧水平依赖(BOLD)信号在皮质广泛降低,这可能在这些发作的病理生理学中起重要作用。动物模型可为研究这些变化的基本机制提供机会,然而,迄今为止它们未能始终如一地复制在人类患者中观察到的皮质fMRI降低。这可能是由于人类发作与动物模型之间存在重要差异,包括啮齿动物缺乏皮质发育或啮齿动物(7 - 8Hz)和人类(3 - 4Hz)棘慢波放电频率的差异。为了研究这些差异可能产生的影响,我们开发了一种雪貂模型,该模型在有沟回的皮质存在时表现出3 - 4Hz的棘慢波发作。BOLD fMRI测量和同步EEG显示,雪貂在棘慢波发作期间及发作后皮质fMRI增加。然而,与人类患者不同,未观察到明显的fMRI降低。在不同持续时间、放电频率和麻醉方案的发作中,以及使用与人类患者相似的fMRI分析模型时,均未观察到fMRI降低。相比之下,在相同条件下的全身强直阵挛发作引发了发作后持续的fMRI降低,证实了棘慢波发作时fMRI未降低并非技术因素所致。这些发现表明,有沟回的动物模型中的3 - 4Hz棘慢波放电不一定会导致fMRI降低,这一现象的机制有待进一步研究。