Experimental Animals
Online ISSN : 1881-7122
Print ISSN : 0007-5124
Sensitivity of Spontaneously Epileptic Rats to External Stimuli That Induce Seizures
Yuzo ASANOAzusa OKANIWATadao SERIKAWAJunzo YAMADA
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JOURNAL FREE ACCESS

1990 Volume 39 Issue 2 Pages 207-212

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Abstract
The sensitivity of spontaneously epileptic rats (SER), double homozygotes of zitter and tremor mutations, to external stimuli that induce seizures was studied in comparison with tremor (tm/tm) and zitter (zi/zi) rats, and with normal Kyo: Wistar and F 344/N rats. Touching their body, a blinking light (1200 lux, 1 sec interval) or a big sound (8 and 12 kHz, 95 dB) induced tonic extension only in the SER. The response frequency was 22 to 44% at 9 weeks of age and 75 to 100% at 13 weeks of age. Electric stimulusi at 30 mA induced tonic-clonic convulsions in all Kyo: Wistar and F 344/N rats. At 20 mA the incidence of seizures decreased with age, from 100% at 5 weeks of age to 33% at 13 weeks of age in Kyo: Wistar rats and from 100 to 71% in F344/N rats. In SER, 10-mA stimuli induced tonic extension at 9 and 13 weeks of age, and 20 and 30 mA induced tonic convulsions, generalized or partial convulsions, and wild jumping or running episodes at 5, 9 and 13 weeks of age. At 30 mA, the incidence of convulsive seizures decreased with age in both tremor (tm/tm) and zitter (zi/zi) rats. Apparently external stimuli acted as simple triggers in the induction of tonic extension, since characteristic tonic extension is induced in the SER by each of the stimuli used in the present study, and induced convulsions closely resembled spontaneously occurringconvulsions. The threshold of external stimuli in the induction of tonic extensionbecame lower with aging in the SER, indicating that they are appropriate modelsfor evaluating anticonvulsant drugs, as reported previously.
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© Japanese Association for Laboratory Animal Science
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