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Lacosamide and levetiracetam have no effect on sharp-wave ripple rate

Authors :
Kudlacek, Jan
Chvojka, Jan
Posusta, Antonin
Kovacova, Lubica
Hong, Seung Bong
Weiss, MD, PhD, Shennan A.
Volna, Kamila
Marusic, Petr
Otahal, Jakub
Jiruska, Premysl
Kudlacek, Jan
Chvojka, Jan
Posusta, Antonin
Kovacova, Lubica
Hong, Seung Bong
Weiss, MD, PhD, Shennan A.
Volna, Kamila
Marusic, Petr
Otahal, Jakub
Jiruska, Premysl
Source :
Department of Neurology Faculty Papers
Publication Year :
2017

Abstract

Pathological high-frequency oscillations are a novel marker used to improve the delineation of epileptogenic tissue and, hence, the outcome of epilepsy surgery. Their practical clinical utilization is curtailed by the inability to discriminate them from physiological oscillations due to frequency overlap. Although it is well documented that pathological HFOs are suppressed by antiepileptic drugs (AEDs), the effect of AEDs on normal HFOs is not well known. In this experimental study, we have explored whether physiological HFOs (sharp-wave ripples) of hippocampal origin respond to AED treatment. The results show that application of a single dose of levetiracetam or lacosamide does not reduce the rate of sharp-wave ripples. In addition, it seems that these new generation drugs do not negatively affect the cellular and network mechanisms involved in sharp-wave ripple generation, which may provide a plausible explanation for the absence of significant negative effects on cognitive functions of these drugs, particularly on memory. © 2017 Kudlacek, Chvojka, Posusta, Kovacova, Hong, Weiss, Volna, Marusic, Otahal and Jiruska.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Journal :
Department of Neurology Faculty Papers
Notes :
application/pdf
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1041946015
Document Type :
Electronic Resource