Abstract

In patients suffering from temporal lobe epilepsy (TLE) a highly variable degree of hippocampal sclerosis (HS) can be observed. For standard neuropathological evaluation after hippocampal resection, neuronal cell loss in the hippocampal subareas is assessed (Wyler score 0-4) [Wyler et al. (1992) J Epilepsy 5: 220-225]. Other marked morphological changes in the sclerotic hippocampus are gliosis and loss of mossy fibers in the hilus and mossy fiber sprouting in the supragranular layer. In this study we quantified changes in mossy fiber density using Timm's stain in resected hippocampal tissue from patients with various degrees of sclerosis. We found that tissue specimens from patients without sclerosis (W0) show almost no mossy fiber sprouting. Patients with moderate sclerosis show sprouting without fiber loss in the hilus, whereas specimens from patients with severe sclerosis show sprouting as well as fiber loss in the hilus. Thus, analysis of mossy fiber abundance in hilus and supragranular layer by the rapid and simple Timm's stain is a sensitive measure for hippocampal sclerosis. It provides a reliable rapid tool for neuropathological evaluation, even if the tissue only contains dentate gyrus due to the sectioning procedure.

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