Abstract

Electrical stimulation (ES) of the nervous system is a promising alternative for the treatment of refractory epilepsy. Based on the understanding that seizures are the expression of neural hypersynchronism, our group developed and tested a non-standard form of low-energy temporally unstructured ES termed NPS (Non-periodic stimulation), with pseudo-randomized inter-pulse intervals. Previous investigation demonstrated that NPS applied to the amygdala has a robust anticonvulsant effect against both acute and chronic seizures, and suggested that its therapeutic effect is based on direct desynchronization of ictogenic neural circuits. Further mechanistic investigation using functional magnetic resonance imaging has shown that NPS also activates nucleus accumbens (NAc) in seizure-free rats, raising the hypothesis of an alternative therapeutic mechanism: NPS-enhanced indirect inhibition / desynchronization of ictogenic circuits by NAc. In order to investigate this idea, here we evaluated behavior and cortical electrographic activity from animals submitted to pentylenetetrazole (PTZ) induced seizures, treated with NPS and with or without bilateral electrolytic lesion of NAc. NPS-treated animals with bilateral lesion of NAc expressed unexpected straub tail in addition to other stereotypical convulsive behavior, displayed increased susceptibility to PTZ (lower drug threshold), and had a much longer electrographic seizure, with a greater number of spikes, firing at a higher rate. Moreover, analysis of spike morphology showed an increase in amplitude and slope in these animals, suggesting that ablation of NAc results in disinhibition and/or increase of neural synchronism within ictogenic circuits. NPS had no therapeutic effect whatsoever in lesioned animals, while it displayed a mild anticonvulsant effect in those with intact brains. Results corroborate the notion that NAc has a key role in controlling aberrant epileptiform activity in ictogenic circuits through indirect polysynaptic connections that may enroll the ventral pallidum and ventral tegmental area. They also point to the possibility that NPS may enhance this effect, putatively by benefiting from the structure’s property of detecting saliences.

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