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Imaging blood-brain barrier dysfunction as a biomarker for epileptogenesis.

Authors :
Bar-Klein, Guy
Lublinsky, Svetlana
Kamintsky, Lyn
Noyman, Iris
Veksler, Ronel
Dalipaj, Hotjensa
Senatorov Jr., Vladimir V.
Swissa, Evyatar
Rosenbach, Dror
Elazary, Netta
Milikovsky, Dan Z.
Milk, Nadav
Kassirer, Michael
Rosman, Yossi
Serlin, Yonatan
Eisenkraft, Arik
Chassidim, Yoash
Parmet, Yisrael
Kaufer, Daniela
Friedman, Alon
Source :
Brain: A Journal of Neurology; Jun2017, Vol. 140 Issue 6, p1692-1705, 14p
Publication Year :
2017

Abstract

A biomarker that will enable the identification of patients at high-risk for developing post-injury epilepsy is critically required. Microvascular pathology and related blood-brain barrier dysfunction and neuroinflammation were shown to be associated with epileptogenesis after injury. Here we used prospective, longitudinal magnetic resonance imaging to quantitatively follow blood-brain barrier pathology in rats following status epilepticus, late electrocorticography to identify epileptic animals and post-mortem immunohistochemistry to confirm blood-brain barrier dysfunction and neuroinflammation. Finally, to test the pharmacodynamic relevance of the proposed biomarker, two anti-epileptogenic interventions were used; isoflurane anaesthesia and losartan. Our results show that early blood-brain barrier pathology in the piriform network is a sensitive and specific predictor (area under the curve of 0.96, P < 0.0001) for epilepsy, while diffused pathology is associated with a lower risk. Early treatments with either isoflurane anaesthesia or losartan prevented early microvascular damage and late epilepsy. We suggest quantitative assessment of blood-brain barrier pathology as a clinically relevant predictive, diagnostic and pharmaco!dynamics biomarker for acquired epilepsy. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00068950
Volume :
140
Issue :
6
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
Brain: A Journal of Neurology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
123262354
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1093/brain/awx073