Ethosuximide suppresses seizures and lethality induced by picrotoxin in developing rats.
Клучни зборови
Апстракт
The action of ethosuximide (125 or 250 mg/kg, IP) against picrotoxin-induced seizures (3-6 mg/kg, IP) was assessed in rats 12, 18, 25, and 90 days old. In 18-day-old and older controls, picrotoxin regularly elicited clonic seizures; tonic-clonic seizures were induced in all age categories with high consequent mortality. Only the higher dose of ethosuximide (250 mg/kg) increased the latency of clonic seizures in 18- and 25-day-old pups. Tonic-clonic seizures were delayed by ethosuximide in 12-, 18-, and 90-day-old rats. Picrotoxin-induced lethality was suppressed only in 18- and 90-day-old rats by the 250-mg/kg dose of ethosuximide. In contrast, ethosuximide pretreatment increased the incidence of clonic seizures in 12-day-old rats. The results suggest that only high doses of ethosuximide can suppress clonic seizures, and this action is not consistent. Tonic-clonic seizures probably have model-specific sensitivity to ethosuximide because in previous studies ethosuximide completely suppressed pentylenetetrazol-induced tonic-clonic seizures but had no effect on kainic acid-induced tonic-clonic seizures. The suppression of mortality rates is probably due to nonspecific effects of high doses of ethosuximide.