Contact:
Christine Guilfoy
Office: (301) 634-7253
cguilfoy@the-aps.org
Septum Sets The Tempo Of Brain’s Electrical
Activity
Keeping neurons in synch reduces
epileptic seizures by 90%
BETHESDA, MD (June 20, 2006) - The brain’s septum helps
prevent epileptic seizures by inducing rhythmical
electrical activity in the circuits of another area of the brain
known as the hippocampus, according to a new study in the Journal of
Neurophysiology. The researchers found that, by imposing a normal
“theta” rhythm on chronically epileptic rats, they could reduce epileptic
seizures by 86-97%.
The study “Septo-hippocampal networks in chronically
epileptic rats: Potential antiepileptic effects of theta rhythm generation,”
by Luis V. Colom, Antonio García-Hernández, Maria T. Castañeda, Miriam G.
Perez-Cordova and Emilio R. Garrido-Sanabria, The University of Texas at
Brownsville/Texas Southmost College, appears in the June issue of the
Journal of Neurophysiology, published by The American
Physiological Society.
The septum acts as the conductor, orchestrating brain
impulses as they pass from the brain stem through the septum and on to the
hippocampus, said the study’s lead researcher, Luis V. Colom, of the
University of Texas at Brownsville/Texas Southmost College. The hippocampus
is a part of the brain that plays a role in memory, spatial navigation and
sensory motor integration, among other functions.
Normally, the
hippocampus oscillates at a frequency of 3-12 Hz, a frequency that is called
the theta rhythm, Colom explained.
Oscillations at theta frequency are important in processing and storing
relevant sensory information and appears important to certain memory
processes.
“My hypothesis is that the septum keeps the electrical
activity of neurons within certain areas of the brain working within normal
ranges,” Colom said. “By keeping the neurons firing normally, the septum
inhibits neuronal hyperexcitability, such as epilepsy, and hypoexcitablity,
such as Alzheimer’s disease.” In addition, septal impulses may help
to maintain the anatomical integrity of other brain structures.
Neurons talk
The brain’s neurons are constantly chatting with each
other through electrical impulses but it’s a
chatter that has to be kept in check, or it can snowball into an electrical
storm that marks an epileptic seizure, Colom explained. Epilepsy affects an
estimated 4 million Americans, he said.
There are a variety of ways to induce neurons to fire
rhythmically, including, interestingly, engaging in stimulating cognitive
activities.
Scientists and medical providers know that brain
lesions, skull fractures, and high fever are among the factors that can
produce epilepsy. But in most cases, there is no obvious cause, Colom said.
Colom’s lifelong interest in how the brain works has
led him to study epilepsy and Alzheimer’s disease. People who suffer
Alzheimer’s, a degenerative disorder that affects various brain regions
including the septum, have a higher risk of
epileptic seizures, in the 10-22% range, he noted.
Previous studies have suggested that the septum plays
an antiepileptic role. But in this study, Colom et al. showed what happens
among the septum’s neurons during epilepsy, knowledge that is important to
understanding the mechanism underlying seizure generation. This line of
inquiry could one day lead to the development of anti-epileptic drugs, said
Colom.
Theta disrupted in
epileptic rats
In this study, the researchers induced epilepsy by
injecting anesthetized rats with pilocarpine, a drug that excites the
brain’s neurons and activates the synapses between the neurons to produce
status epilepticus, in which sustained seizures occur. The rats received
diazepam three hours later to interrupt the seizures, but became chronically
epileptic, experiencing 3-5 seizures weekly.
The researchers then used electrodes to record
individual neurons within the septum of the anesthetized rats to see what
happened within the nerve pathways. They found that the epileptic rats
suffered significantly more epileptic episodes when the brain did not have
the proper theta rhythm.
The researchers also found that when the theta rhythm
was induced in the rats, it reduced epileptic discharges 86-97%. (The
researchers induced theta in one of three ways – by regulating the rats’
anesthesia, by stimulating the septum directly with an injection of
carbachol, or by using the sensory stimulation method of pinching the tail.)
The amplitude and frequency of the theta rhythm of the
epileptic rats was significantly altered compared to the control group. In
effect, the theta rhythm became faster and more jittery. Also, the septal
neurons of epileptic rats doubled their firing rates in relation to the
controls, from about 14 spikes per second to about 29 spikes per second.
Two promising lines of
research
Colom and his fellow researchers at the University of
Texas at Brownsville/Texas Southmost College are looking at two different
approaches to stopping epilepsy. One group is taking the approach of making
the neurons less excitable (this effort is led by Emilio Garrido-Sanabria
and Masoud Zarei). Colom’s group is looking for a new treatment that will
focus on inducing theta.
“The understanding of the theta rhythm’s
anti-epileptic effect at the cellular and molecular levels may result in
novel therapeutic approaches dedicated to protect the brain against abnormal
excitability states,” the authors wrote.
Although this research gives more insight into how
epilepsy occurs, a cure is still years away. “But I would say there is
hope,” Colom said. “We want to offer people with epilepsy new options,” he
said, but progress will depend upon funding, he added.
Next steps
The researchers will repeat the study using animals
that are awake and mobile, though it is more difficult to record the brain’s
discharges in freely moving animals. Then the research can move to humans.
Source and funding
“Septo-hippocampal networks in chronically epileptic
rats: potential antiepileptic effects of theta rhythm generation,” by Luis
V. Colom, Antonio García-Hernández, Maria T. Castañeda, Miriam G.
Perez-Cordova and Emilio R. Garrido-Sanabria, Department of Biological
Sciences and Center for Biomedical Studies, The University of Texas at
Brownsville/Texas Southmost College, Brownsville. The study appears in the
June issue of the Journal of Neurophysiology published by The
American Physiological Society.
The study was funded by National Institutes of
Health grants to Colom, and to Colom and Garrido-Sanabria.
Editor’s note: The media may obtain a copy of
Colom et al. by contacting
Christine Guilfoy, American Physiological Society, (301) 634-7253, (978)
290-2400 (cell), or
cguilfoy@the-aps.org.
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