Abstract

Ethosuximide appears to have a specific effect on the low-threshold calcium current in thalamic cells. This may be related to its efficacy in the treatment of absence epilepsy. We used a computer model of an individual thalamocortical neuron to better understand the alteration in the low-threshold calcium current under voltage clamp and to predict response to current injection in the presence of ethosuximide. The full model included nine voltage-sensitive ionic channels and a realistic dendritic morphology. The model reproduced the two major responses seen in tissue slices: repetitive spiking with depolarization and the low-threshold calcium spike elicited on release from hyperpolarization. The alteration in low-threshold calcium current with ethosuximide can be explained by a 10-mV depolarizing shift in the steady-state activation curve for this channel with a 10% reduction in maximum channel permeability. Simulations of current injection showed that ethosuximide diminished the low-threshold calcium spike while leaving the tonic firing pattern unaffected. Our results support the hypothesis that ethosuximide's effects on low-threshold calcium current might selectively alter the dynamics of slow bursting in thalamic cells.

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