Artigo Revisado por pares

Absence of electrographic seizures after transient forebrain ischemia in the Mongolian gerbil

1989; Elsevier BV; Volume: 476; Issue: 1 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1016/0006-8993(89)91554-0

ISSN

1872-6240

Autores

David R. Armstrong, Kenneth H. Neill, Barbara J. Crain, J. Victor Nadler,

Tópico(s)

Adipose Tissue and Metabolism

Resumo

EEG was continuously recorded from Mongolian gerbils for 4 days after transient bilateral forebrain ischemia, to determine whether ischemic brain damage in this species is necessarily associated with seizures. Gerbils were chronically implanted with EEG recording electrodes in hippocampal area CA1, striatum and frontal neocortex and were subjected to a 5–10 min occlusion of both common carotid arteries. During the first few hours after the occlusion, the EEG was dominated by slow waves similar to those recorded from human brain after a damaging episode of cerebral ischemia. Amplitudes of the hippocampal and striatal EEG declined markedly with time, presumably as a result of neuronal degeneration. Ictal activity was never recorded, even from animals that suffered extreme damage to the hippocampal formation and striatum. Therefore ischemic brain damage in the gerbil does not result from seizure activity.

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