Status epilepticus as a system disturbance: is status epilepticus due to synchronization or desynchronization?
- PMID: 24001069
- PMCID: PMC3767191
- DOI: 10.1111/epi.12273
Status epilepticus as a system disturbance: is status epilepticus due to synchronization or desynchronization?
Abstract
The traditional view of seizure activity is one in which there is extreme hypersynchronization. Although what is meant by hypersynchronization is rarely explicitly and fully defined, it can be understood to imply large numbers of neurons firing together essentially simultaneously. In this discussion we explore the possibility that seizures-both self-terminating and sustained in status-are not purely synchronous in time or in space. We investigate the alternative possibility that much seizure activity represents spatiotemporal desynchronization. Furthermore, we discuss the possibility that, in contrast to canonical views of epileptic activity, a high degree of synchronization is a prerequisite for termination of the seizure rather than a marker of early and ongoing seizure activity. These ideas will be discussed with reference to results from our collaborative group based on microelectrode recordings in patients with epilepsy as well as to the many studies done by others in both patients and animal models. Finally, we will explore implications for these hypotheses in the treatment of patients with epilepsy and in status epilepticus.
Keywords: Action potential; Hypersynchronization; Scale; Seizure termination; Synaptic input.
Wiley Periodicals, Inc. © 2013 International League Against Epilepsy.
Conflict of interest statement
I have no conflicts of interest to declare.
I confirm that I have read the Journal’s position on issues involved in ethical publication and affirm that this report is consistent with those guidelines.
References
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- Gutkin BS, Ermentrout GB, et al. Phase-response curves give the responses of neurons to transient inputs. J Neurophysiol. 2005;94(2):1623–1635. - PubMed
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