Epilepsy Research
Volume 23, Issue 1 , Pages 15-36, February 1996

Anticonvulsant drug effects on spontaneous thalamocortical rhythms in vitro: Ethosuximide, trimethadione, and dimethadione

  • Yun-Fu Zhang

      Affiliations

    • Department of Neurology, Medical College of Virginia, Richmond, VA, USA
  • ,
  • John W. Gibbs III

      Affiliations

    • Department of Anatomy, Medical College of Virginia, Richmond, VA, USA
  • ,
  • Douglas A. Coulter

      Affiliations

    • Corresponding Author InformationCorresponding author. Department of Neurology, P.O. Box 980599, Medical College of Virginia, Richmond, VA 23298-0599, USA. Tel.: (804) 828-3392; fax: (804) 828-6373
    • Department of Neurology, Medical College of Virginia, Richmond, VA, USA
    • Department of Anatomy, Medical College of Virginia, Richmond, VA, USA
    • MCV Comprehensive Epilepsy Institute of Virginia Commonwealth University, Richmond, VA, USA

Received 1 March 1995; accepted 24 August 1995.

Abstract 

Spontaneous generalized epileptiform discharges were elicitedin rodent thalamocortical slices by perfusion with a medium containing no added Mg2+. In multiple-channel extracellular field potential recordings in thalamus and cortex, several distinct types of discharges were recorded, with two principal variants bearing marked similarity to spike-wave and generalized tonic-clonic seizure discharges recorded in patients with generalized seizure disorders. These discharges were termed sTBCs and cTBCs, respectively, for simple and complex thalamocortical burst complexes. The sensitivity of these discharges to the generalized absence anticonvulsants ethosuximide, trimethadione and dimethadione (the active metabolite of trimethadione) was studied. sTBCs were reduced or blocked by ethosuximide and dimethadione, when these drugs were applied in clinically relevant concentrations. The order of effectiveness of these agents was dimethadione ⩾ ethosuximide⪢ trimethadione. This paralleled the relative efficacy of these drugs in blocking T current in thalamic neurons. cTBCs were unaffected or exacerbated by these drugs. Structural control drugs including succinimide, the behaviorally inactive ring base of ethosuximide, and α, α-dimethyl-β-methylsuccinimide, a convulsant succinimide, were inactive or exacerbated either sTBCs or cTBCs, respectively. These spontaneous generalized thalamocortical discharges in rodent thalamocortical slices may represent a potentially valuable in vitro model of generalized seizure discharges, with marked pharmacological and physiological similarities to various forms of clinical epileptic seizure activity.

Keywords:  Generalized absence epilepsy, Seizure, Spike-wave discharge, Generalized tonic-clonic seizure, Thalamus, Cortex

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PII: 0920-1211(95)00079-8

Epilepsy Research
Volume 23, Issue 1 , Pages 15-36, February 1996