Abstract
The present study examined the ovarian hormonal regulation of seizure susceptibility in prenatally morphine- and saline-exposed adult female rats in the flurothyl seizure model in vivo, and in low-magnesium-induced epileptiform activity in brain slices, in vitro. All females were ovariohysterectomized (OVX); some received either estrogen (E) or progesterone (P) replacement, while others were injected with E + P sequentially. In prenatally saline-treated control females, there was an increase in the flurothyl-induced clinic seizure threshold (anticonvulsant effect) in the presence of both hormones (E + P) compared to OVX controls. In morphine-exposed females, there was an increase in the flurothyl-induced clonic seizure threshold after an E injection alone while there was a reduced tonic-clonic seizure threshold in the presence of both hormones (E + P) compared to the hormone treatment-matched group of saline-exposed females. In control females, in low magnesium medium in vitro, the development of two types of epileptiform activity (seizure-like events and status of short discharges) was not affected by the different hormonal conditions. However, prenatal morphine exposure suppressed the development of both types of epileptiform activity in the E-injected females compared to the E-injected, control females. The present data demonstrate that the anticonvulsant effects of P on seizure susceptibility requires the presence of E. Furthermore, prenatal morphine exposure alters ovarian steroid hormone-regulated seizure susceptibility.
Original language | English (US) |
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Pages (from-to) | 247-256 |
Number of pages | 10 |
Journal | Brain research |
Volume | 796 |
Issue number | 1-2 |
DOIs | |
State | Published - Jun 15 1998 |
Keywords
- Brainstem
- Convulsion
- Entorhinal cortex
- Estrogen
- Flurothyl
- Forebrain
- Low magnesium
- Progesterone
ASJC Scopus subject areas
- Neuroscience(all)
- Molecular Biology
- Clinical Neurology
- Developmental Biology