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Publication : Mouse strain variation in maximal electroshock seizure threshold.

First Author  Ferraro TN Year  2002
Journal  Brain Res Volume  936
Issue  1-2 Pages  82-6
PubMed ID  11988233 Mgi Jnum  J:76869
Mgi Id  MGI:2180448 Doi  10.1016/s0006-8993(02)02565-9
Citation  Ferraro TN, et al. (2002) Mouse strain variation in maximal electroshock seizure threshold. Brain Res 936(1-2):82-6
abstractText  Maximal electroshock seizure threshold (MEST) is a classical measure of seizure sensitivity with a wide range of experimental applications. We determined MEST in nine inbred mouse strains and one congenic strain using a procedure in which mice are given one shock per day with an incremental (1 mA) current increase in each successive trial until a maximal seizure (tonic hindlimb extension) is elicited. C57BL/6J and DBA/2J mice exhibited the highest and lowest MEST, respectively, with the values of other strains falling between these two extremes. The relative rank order of MEST values by inbred strain (highest to lowest) is as follows: C57BL/6J > CBA/J = C3H/HeJ > A/J > Balb/cJ = 129/SvIMJ = 129/SvJ > AKR/J > DBA/2J. Results of experiments involving a single electroconvulsive shock given to separate groups of mice at different current intensities suggest that determination of MEST by the method used is not affected by repeated sub-maximal seizures. Overall, results document a distinctive mouse strain distribution pattern for MEST. Additionally, low within strain variability suggests that environmental factors which affect quantification of MEST are readily controlled under the conditions of this study. We conclude that MEST represents a useful tool for dissecting the multifactorial nature of seizure sensitivity in mice.
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