Abstract

Chronic epilepsy has been associated with hippocampal abnormalities like neuronal loss, gliosis and granule cell dispersion. The granule cell layer of a normal human hippocampal dentate gyrus is traditionally regarded as a compact neuron-dense layer. Histopathological studies of surgically resected or autopsied hippocampal samples primarily from temporal lobe epilepsy patients, as well as animal models of epilepsy, describe variable patterns of granule cell dispersion including focal cell clusters, broader thick segments, and bilamination or “tram-tracking”. Although most studies have implicated granule cell dispersion as a specific feature of chronic epilepsy, very few “non-seizure” controls were included in these published investigations. Our retrospective survey of 147 cadaveric pediatric human hippocampi identified identical morphological spectra of granule cell dispersion in both normal and seizure-affected brains. Moreover, sections across the entire antero-posterior axis of a control cadaveric hippocampus revealed repetitive occurrence of different morphologies of the granule cell layer – compact, focally disaggregated and bilaminar. The results indicate that granule cell dispersion is within the spectrum of normal variation and not unique to patients with epilepsy. We speculate that sampling bias has been responsible for an erroneous dogma, which we hope to rectify with this investigation.

Highlights

  • Chronic epilepsy is often associated with several pathological hippocampal abnormalities [44]

  • Human hippocampal samples and clinical records After appropriate approval from the Institutional Review Board, 147 archived H&E-stained, coronal sections of hippocampus and associated clinical history were obtained from pediatric patients autopsied at Seattle Children’s Hospital between (2014–2019). 126 controls (C, no history of seizures) and 21 seizure (SZ) cases were included in this retrospective study

  • The second subtype has a bilaminar appearance of the granule cell (GC) layer with cell-sparse zone in the center [3, 30]; we refer to this as “tram-track” granule cell dispersion (GCD) (TT)

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Chronic epilepsy is often associated with several pathological hippocampal abnormalities [44] These include sclerosis, characterized by neuronal loss in both dentate gyrus and Ammon’s horn, gliosis, mossy fiber sprouting; as well as granule cell dispersion (GCD), which is observed in the presence or absence of sclerosis [9, 10, 15, 30, 55, 56]. These studies were mostly performed in surgical resections or autopsied brain samples obtained from patients suffering from febrile seizures and temporal lobe epilepsy (TLE); it is unclear whether the GCD has been reported commonly in the dentate gyrus (DG) of seizure patients and considered a hallmark of chronic epilepsy, especially TLE [3, 21, 30, 35, 55, 56]. Some surgical cases demonstrated the existence of focal clusters of

Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call