227 research outputs found

    Bicuculline induced seizures in infant rats: ontogeny of behavioral and electrocortical phenomena.

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    The effects of bicuculline, a gamma-aminobutyric acid (GABA) antagonist, were investigated in 258 immature rats between the third and 22nd postnatal days. Behavioral and electrocorticographic events were correlated. Bicuculline induced both behavioral and electrographic seizures as early as the third postnatal day, an age when the CD50 for bicuculline was lowest, and therefore the sensitivity to it was the greatest. Bicuculline may thus be a suitable convulsant for epilepsy studies involving rats during the first postnatal week

    Cerebrospinal fluid corticotropin and cortisol are reduced in infantile spasms.

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    Infantile spasms respond to ACTH, and levels of the hormone in cerebrospinal fluid of untreated infants with this disorder were found to be lower than in age-matched controls. In this study we analyzed cerebrospinal fluid cortisol and ACTH using improved immunoassays in a larger cohort of infants with infantile spasms. Analysis of 20 patients and 15 age-matched controls revealed significantly lower levels of both ACTH and cortisol in the cerebrospinal fluid. These data, combined with the efficacy of ACTH and glucocorticoids for infantile spasms, support an involvement of the brain-adrenal-axis in this disorder

    High-dose corticotropin (ACTH) versus prednisone for infantile spasms: a prospective, randomized, blinded study.

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    ObjectiveTo compare the efficacy of corticotropin (ACTH) (150 U/m2/day) and prednosone (2 mg/kg/day) given for 2 weeks, in suppressing clinical spasms and hypsarrhythmic electroencephalogram (EEG) in infantile spasms (IS). AACTH and prednisone are standard treatments for IS. ACTH at high doses causes severe dose- and duration-dependent side effects, but may be superior to prednisone, based on retrospective or uncontrolled studies. Blinded prospecive studies have shown equal efficacy of prednisone and low-dose ACTH, and low versus high-dose ACTH.DesignA prospective, randomized, single-blinded study.Subjects and methodsPatient population consisted of consecutive infants fulfilling entry criteria, including the presence of clinical spasms, hypsarrhythmia (or variants) during a full sleep cycle video-EEG, and no prior steroid/ACTH treatment. Response required both cessation of spasms and elimination of hypsarrhythmia by the end of the 2-week treatment period, as determined by an investigator "blinded" to treatment. Treatment of responders was tapered off over 12 days; those failing one hormone were crossed-over to the other.ResultsOF 34 eligible infants, 29 were enrolled. Median age of patients was 6 months. Twenty-two infants were "symptomatic" with known or suspected cause, and seven were cryptogenic (two normal). Of 15 infants randomized to ACTH, 13 responded by EEG and clinical criteria (86.6%); Seizures stopped in an additional infant, but EEG remained hypsarrhythmic (considered a failure). Four of the 14 patients given prednisone responded (28.6%,, with complete clinical-EEG correlation), significantly less than with ACTH, (chi2 test).ConclusionsUsing a prospective, randomized approach, a 2-week course of high-dose ACTH is superior to 2 weeks of prednsone for treatment of IS, as assessed by both clinical and EEG criteria
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