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Pattern of trauma determines the threshold for epileptic activity in a model of cortical deafferentation.


ABSTRACT: Epileptic activity often occurs in the cortex after a latent period after head trauma; this delay has been attributed to the destabilizing influence of homeostatic synaptic scaling and changes in intrinsic properties. However, the impact of the spatial organization of cortical trauma on epileptogenesis is poorly understood. We addressed this question by analyzing the dynamics of a large-scale biophysically realistic cortical network model subjected to different patterns of trauma. Our results suggest that the spatial pattern of trauma can greatly affect the propensity for developing posttraumatic epileptic activity. For the same fraction of lesioned neurons, spatially compact trauma resulted in stronger posttraumatic elevation of paroxysmal activity than spatially diffuse trauma. In the case of very severe trauma, diffuse distribution of a small number of surviving intact neurons alleviated posttraumatic epileptogenesis. We suggest that clinical evaluation of the severity of brain trauma should take into account the spatial pattern of the injured cortex.

SUBMITTER: Volman V 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC3174624 | biostudies-literature | 2011 Sep

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature

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Pattern of trauma determines the threshold for epileptic activity in a model of cortical deafferentation.

Volman Vladislav V   Bazhenov Maxim M   Sejnowski Terrence J TJ  

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 20110906 37


Epileptic activity often occurs in the cortex after a latent period after head trauma; this delay has been attributed to the destabilizing influence of homeostatic synaptic scaling and changes in intrinsic properties. However, the impact of the spatial organization of cortical trauma on epileptogenesis is poorly understood. We addressed this question by analyzing the dynamics of a large-scale biophysically realistic cortical network model subjected to different patterns of trauma. Our results su  ...[more]

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