Volume 46, Issue 1 pp. 8-14

Use of Chronic Epilepsy Models in Antiepileptic Drug Discovery: The Effect of Topiramate on Spontaneous Motor Seizures in Rats with Kainate-induced Epilepsy

Heidi L. Grabenstatter

Heidi L. Grabenstatter

Department of Biomedical Sciences, Anatomy and Neurobiology Section

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Damien J. Ferraro

Damien J. Ferraro

Department of Biomedical Sciences, Anatomy and Neurobiology Section

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Philip A. Williams

Philip A. Williams

Department of Microbiology, Immunology, and Pathology

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Phillip L. Chapman

Phillip L. Chapman

Department of Statistics, Colorado State University, Fort Collins, Colorado, U.S.A.

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F. Edward Dudek

F. Edward Dudek

Department of Biomedical Sciences, Anatomy and Neurobiology Section

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First published: 11 January 2005
Citations: 76
Address correspondence and reprint requests to Dr. F. Edward Dudek at Department of Biomedical Sciences, Anatomy and Neurobiology Section, Colorado State University, Fort Collins, CO 80523, U.S.A. E-mail: [email protected]

Abstract

Summary: Purpose: Potential antiepileptic drugs (AEDs) are typically screened on acute seizures in normal animals, such as those induced in the maximal electroshock and pentylenetet-razole models. As a proof-of-principle test, the present experiments used spontaneous epileptic seizures in kainate-treated rats to examine the efficacy of topiramate (TPM) with a repeated-measures, crossover protocol.

Methods: Kainic acid was administered in repeated low doses (5 mg/kg) every hour until each Sprague–Dawley rat experienced convulsive status epilepticus for >3 h. Six 1-month trials (n = 6–10 rats) assessed the effects of 0.3–100 mg/kg TPM on spontaneous seizures. Each trial involved six pairs of TPM and saline-control treatments administered as intraperitoneal injections on alternate days with a recovery day between each treatment day. Data analysis included a log transformation to compensate for the asymmetric distribution of values and the heterogeneous variances, which appeared to arise from clustering of seizures.

Results: A significant effect of TPM was observed for 12 h (i.e., two 6-h periods) after a 30-mg/kg injection, and full recovery from the drug effect was complete within 43 h. TPM exerted a significant effect at doses of 10, 30, and 100 mg/kg, and the effects of TPM (0.3–100 mg/kg) were dose dependent.

Conclusions: These data suggest that animal models with spontaneous seizures, such as kainate- and pilocarpine-treated rats, can be used efficiently for rapid testing of AEDs with a repeated-measures, crossover protocol. Furthermore, the results indicate that this design allows both dose–effect and time-course-of-recovery studies.

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