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Publication : Acute effect of antiseizure drugs on background oscillations in Scn1a (A1783V) Dravet syndrome mouse model.

First Author  Quinn S Year  2023
Journal  Front Pharmacol Volume  14
Pages  1118216 PubMed ID  37021051
Mgi Jnum  J:335050 Mgi Id  MGI:7460616
Doi  10.3389/fphar.2023.1118216 Citation  Quinn S, et al. (2023) Acute effect of antiseizure drugs on background oscillations in Scn1a (A1783V) Dravet syndrome mouse model. Front Pharmacol 14:1118216
abstractText  Dravet syndrome (Dravet) is a rare and severe form of developmental epileptic encephalopathy. Antiseizure medications (ASMs) for Dravet patients include valproic acid (VA) or clobazam (CLB), with or without stiripentol (STP), while sodium channel blockers like carbamazepine (CBZ) or lamotrigine (LTG) are contraindicated. In addition to their effect on epileptic phenotypes, ASMs were shown to modify the properties of background neuronal activity. Nevertheless, little is known about these background properties alterations in Dravet. Here, utilizing Dravet mice (DS, Scn1a (A1783V/WT)), we tested the acute effect of several ASMs on background electrocorticography (ECoG) activity and frequency of interictal spikes. Compared to wild-type mice, background ECoG activity in DS mice had lower power and reduced phase coherence, which was not corrected by any of the tested ASMs. However, acute administration of Dravet-recommended drugs, VA, CLB, or a combination of CLB + STP, caused, in most mice, a reduction in the frequency of interictal spikes, alongside an increase in the relative contribution of the beta frequency band. Conversely, CBZ and LTG increased the frequency of interictal spikes, with no effect on background spectral properties. Moreover, we uncovered a correlation between the reduction in interictal spike frequency, the drug-induced effect on the power of background activity, and a spectral shift toward higher frequency bands. Together, these data provide a comprehensive analysis of the effect of selected ASMs on the properties of background neuronal oscillations, and highlight a possible correlation between their effect on epilepsy and background activity.
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