Shao Li-Rong, Habela Christa W, Stafstrom Carl E
Division of Pediatric Neurology, Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Baltimore, MD 21287, USA.
Children (Basel). 2019 Feb 5;6(2):23. doi: 10.3390/children6020023.
Mechanisms underlying seizures and epilepsy have traditionally been considered to involve abnormalities of ion channels or synaptic function. Those considerations gave rise to the excitation/inhibition (E/I) imbalance theory, whereby increased excitation, decreased inhibition, or both favor a hyperexcitable state and an increased propensity for seizure generation and epileptogenesis. Several recent findings warrant reconsideration and expansion of the E/I hypothesis: novel genetic mutations have been identified that do not overtly affect E/I balance; neurotransmitters may exert paradoxical effects, especially during development; anti-seizure medications do not necessarily work by decreasing excitation or increasing inhibition; and metabolic factors participate in the regulation of neuronal and network excitability. These novel conceptual and experimental advances mandate expansion of the E/I paradigm, with the expectation that new and exciting therapies will emerge from this broadened understanding of how seizures and epilepsy arise and progress.
传统上认为,癫痫发作和癫痫的潜在机制涉及离子通道或突触功能异常。这些观点催生了兴奋/抑制(E/I)失衡理论,即兴奋增加、抑制减少或两者兼而有之会导致高兴奋性状态,并增加癫痫发作和癫痫发生的倾向。最近的一些发现值得对E/I假说进行重新审视和扩展:已鉴定出不会明显影响E/I平衡的新型基因突变;神经递质可能会产生矛盾的作用,尤其是在发育过程中;抗癫痫药物不一定通过降低兴奋或增加抑制来发挥作用;代谢因素参与神经元和网络兴奋性的调节。这些新的概念和实验进展要求扩展E/I范式,期望从对癫痫发作和癫痫如何发生及进展的更广泛理解中产生令人兴奋的新疗法。