Abstract
Patients with epilepsy can experience diurnal seizure patterns. However, few studies in rodent models of temporal lobe epilepsy (TLE) routinely quantify the diurnal pattern of spontaneous recurrent seizures (SRS), and those that have conducted such assessments used small groups. This study thus aimed to define whether there was a diurnal pattern of SRS in the early phases of epileptogenesis in a large cohort (n = 40) of post‐kainic acid (KA)‐induced status epilepticus (SE) male Sprague Dawley rats. Rats were monitored by continuous 24/7 video‐EEG in two‐week epochs up to 6 weeks post‐KA‐induced SE. The total number of SRS by 6 weeks post‐SE correlated to body weight at the time of SE insult (R 2 = .1465, P = .0143). The total number of spontaneous behavioral and electrographic seizures, seizure severity, and seizure burden was recorded during lights ON (light) or lights OFF (dark) phases. All measures significantly increased with time post‐SE; we detected significantly more seizures during the lights OFF phase of the post‐SE monitoring periods. Moreover, a subset of rats demonstrated marked seizure preference in the lights OFF phase. Our study confirms that a diurnal pattern of SRS is variably detectable in early epileptogenesis in this model of TLE.
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