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An experimental study of the effect of isoflurane on epileptiform bursts

โœ Scribed by Iver A. Langmoen; Elisabeth Hegstad; Jon Berg-Johnsen


Publisher
Elsevier Science
Year
1992
Tongue
English
Weight
457 KB
Volume
11
Category
Article
ISSN
0920-1211

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โœฆ Synopsis


The effect of isoflurane on penicillin- and picrotoxin-induced epileptiform activity was tested using hippocampal slice preparations. Isoflurane reduced both the frequency of spontaneous epileptiform bursts and the number of population spikes within each burst in a dose-dependent manner. The last population spikes in the burst were most sensitive to the anesthetic, whereas the first 4-6 spikes were quite resistant and persisted until spontaneous activity was abolished at 3% isoflurane. Isoflurane increased the stimulus current required to evoke epileptiform bursts and shifted the relationship between stimulus current and population spike amplitude to the right. At 3% isoflurane, a dose that usually causes iso-electric EEG and abolishes all spontaneous epileptiform activity, responses could still be evoked, and then invariably had an epileptiform pattern. The maximum response was reduced compared to control and 1.5% isoflurane. With isoflurane there was a reduced tendency for activity to be transmitted from one region within the hippocampus to the other. This effect was also dose-dependent. However, transmitted activity always retained a typical epileptiform character, although the number of population spikes within a train to some extent decreased with increasing concentrations of isoflurane.


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