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Publication : Cortical malformations and epilepsy: new insights from animal models.

First Author  Chevassus-au-Louis N Year  1999
Journal  Epilepsia Volume  40
Issue  7 Pages  811-21
PubMed ID  10403203 Mgi Jnum  J:57199
Mgi Id  MGI:1344080 Doi  10.1111/j.1528-1157.1999.tb00786.x
Citation  Chevassus-au-Louis N, et al. (1999) Cortical malformations and epilepsy: new insights from animal models. Epilepsia 40(7):811-21
abstractText  In the last decade, the recognition of the high frequency of cortical malformations among patients with epilepsy especially children, has led to a renewed interest in the study of the pathophysiology of cortical development. This field has also been spurred by the recent development of several experimental genetic and non-genetic, primarily rodent, models of cortical malformations. Epileptiform activity in these animals can appear as spontaneous seizure activity in vivo, in vitro hyperexcitability, or reduced seizure susceptibility in vitro and in vivo. In the neonatal freeze lesion model, that mimics human microgyria, hyperexcitability is caused by a reorganization of the network in the borders of the malformation. In the prenatal methylazoxymethanol model, that causes a diffuse cortical malformation, hyperexcitability is associated with alteration of firing properties of discrete neuronal subpopulations together with the formation of bridges between normally unconnected structures. In agreement with clinical evidence, these experimental data suggest that cortical malformations can both form epileptogenic foci and alter brain development in a manner that causes a diffuse hyperexcitability of the cortical network.
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