Abstract

The relationships between seizures, neuronal death, and epilepsy remain one of the most disputed questions in translational neuroscience. Although it is broadly accepted that prolonged and repeated seizures cause neuronal death and epileptogenesis, whether brief seizures can produce a mild but similar effect is controversial. In the present work, using a rat pentylenetetrazole (PTZ) model of seizures, we evaluated how a single episode of clonic-tonic seizures affected the viability of neurons in the hippocampus, the area of the brain most vulnerable to seizures, and morphological changes in the hippocampus up to 1week after PTZ treatment (recovery period). The main findings of the study were: (1) PTZ-induced seizures caused the transient appearance of massively shrunken, hyperbasophilic, and hyperelectrondense (dark) cells but did not lead to detectable neuronal cell loss. These dark neurons were alive, suggesting that they could cope with seizure-related dysfunction. (2) Neuronal and biochemical alterations following seizures were observed for at least 1week. The temporal dynamics of the appearance and disappearance of dark neurons differed in different zones of the hippocampus. (3) The numbers of cells with structural and functional abnormalities in the hippocampus after PTZ-induced seizures decreased in the following order: CA1 > CA3b,c > hilus > dentate gyrus. Neurons in the CA3a subarea were most resistant to PTZ-induced seizures. These results suggest that even a single seizure episode is a potent stressor of hippocampal neurons and that it can trigger complex neuroplastic changes in the hippocampus.

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