Ischemic injury suppresses hypoxia-induced electrographic seizures and the background EEG in a rat model of perinatal hypoxic-ischemic encephalopathy

Author:

Zayachkivsky A.1,Lehmkuhle M. J.1,Ekstrand J. J.2,Dudek F. E.1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Neurosurgery, University of Utah School of Medicine, Salt Lake City, Utah; and

2. Department of Pediatrics, University of Utah School of Medicine, Salt Lake City, Utah

Abstract

The relationship among neonatal seizures, abnormalities of the electroencephalogram (EEG), brain injury, and long-term neurological outcome (e.g., epilepsy) remains controversial. The effects of hypoxia alone (Ha) and hypoxia-ischemia (HI) were studied in neonatal rats at postnatal day 7; both models generate EEG seizures during the 2-h hypoxia treatment, but only HI causes an infarct with severe neuronal degeneration. Single-channel, differential recordings of acute EEG seizures and background suppression were recorded with a novel miniature telemetry device during the hypoxia treatment and analyzed quantitatively. The waveforms of electrographic seizures (and their behavioral correlates) appeared virtually identical in both models and were identified as discrete events with high power in the traditional delta (0.1–4 Hz) and/or alpha (8–12 Hz) bands. Although the EEG patterns during seizures were similar in Ha- and HI-treated animals at the beginning of the hypoxic insult, Ha caused a more severe electrographic seizure profile than HI near the end. Analyses of power spectral density and seizure frequency profiles indicated that the electrographic seizures progressively increased during the 2-h Ha treatment, while HI led to a progressive decrease in the seizures with significant suppression of the EEG background. These data show that 1) the hypoxia component of these two models drives the seizures; 2) the seizures during Ha are substantially more robust than those during HI, possibly because ongoing neuronal damage blunts the electrographic activity; and 3) a progressive decrease in background EEG, rather than the presence of electrographic seizures, indicates neuronal degeneration during perinatal HI.

Publisher

American Physiological Society

Subject

Physiology,General Neuroscience

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