This article provides a brief review of the role of norepinephrine (NE) in
epilepsy, starting from early studies reproducing the kindling model in
NE-lesioned rats, through the use of specific ligands for adrenergic receptors in
experimental models of epilepsy, up to recent advances obtained by using
transgenic and knock-out mice for specific genes expressed in the NE system. Data
obtained from multiple experimental models converge to demonstrate the
antiepileptic role of endogenous NE. This effect predominantly consists in
counteracting the development of an epileptic circuit (such as in the kindling
model) rather than increasing the epileptic threshold. This suggests that NE
activity is critical in modifying epilepsy-induced neuronal changes especially on
the limbic system. These data encompass from experimental models to clinical
applications as recently evidenced by the need of an intact NE innervation for
the antiepileptic mechanisms of vagal nerve stimulation (VNS) in patients
suffering from refractory epilepsy. Finally, recent data demonstrate that NE loss
increases neuronal damage following focally induced limbic status epilepticus,
confirming a protective effect of brain NE, which has already been shown in other
neurological disorders
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