Model padaczki hippokampalnej u świni indukowany kwasem kainicznym
Kainic acid pig model of hippocampal epilepsy
W skrócie
Naukowcy stworzyli nowy model padaczki u świń, która przypomina padaczkę człowieka. Wszczepiają im specjalne elektrody do mózgu i podają substancję, która wywołuje napady padaczki, które można obserwować i rejestrować. Ten model pomoże naukowcom testować nowe sposoby leczenia padaczki, takie jak stymulatory mózgu.
Oryginalny abstract (angielski)
Translational large-animal models that can accommodate human-scale implantable devices are essential for advancing neuromodulation therapies in epilepsy. This study establishes a kainic acid (KA)-induced porcine model of mesial temporal lobe epilepsy (mTLE) using clinical imaging, stereotactic surgery, and a fully implantable neural stimulator-recorder (INSR) device designed for humans. Seven pigs (six KA-treated and one saline control) underwent MRI-guided stereotactic implantation of electrodes targeting bilateral hippocampus (HPC) and anterior thalamus (ANT), followed by intra-hippocampal KA or saline infusion. Local field potentials (LFP) were recorded continuously with synchronized video monitoring. Seizures and LFP interictal epileptiform-like discharges (IEDs) were quantified using validated automated detectors. Histology was performed in the saline control and the longest surviving KA-treated pig. Intra-hippocampal KA infusion induced acute status epilepticus in all treated pigs (6/6). Four animals survived to chronic monitoring with spontaneous seizures observed in three pigs (2,733 seizures; mean duration of 27.2 ± 17.6 s). IEDs were observed in bilateral HPC of all animals, including saline control, with higher rates in the lesioned HPC (p < 0.0001). While the IED morphology is consistent with epileptiform activity, IEDs alone are not specific for epilepsy and physiological transients (e.g. sharp-wave ripples) and injury-related hyperexcitability or strain-specific hyperexcitability cannot be excluded. Histological analysis revealed patchy neuronal loss and cytoarchitectural changes in HPC. This porcine model reproduces electrophysiological features of human mTLE. This approach provides a powerful translational bridge for developing and testing next-generation INSR and neuromodulation strategies in freely behaving large animals.