Regular Article
A Role for the Bilateral Involvement of Perirhinal Cortex in Generalized Kindled Seizure Expression,☆☆

https://doi.org/10.1006/exnr.1998.6794Get rights and content
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Abstract

The perirhinal cortex (PRh) has been suggested as a substrate for the expression of generalized clonic seizures in the late stages of kindling development (stages 4–5). Using the induction of Fos as a marker of neuronal activation, the PRh region was investigated after kindling or nonkindling electrical stimulation. Nonkindling electrical stimulation of the PRh elicited stimulus-locked behaviors, without afterdischarge. These behaviors were characterized by rearing and bilateral forelimb clonus which were terminated upon electrical stimulus offset in half of the rats displaying this behavior (with the other half expressing self-sustained seizures). In these animals, Fos immunoreactivity was found throughout neocortical and subcortical structures in the hemisphere ipsilateral to the stimulating electrode. By contrast, Fos-immunoreactivity in the contralateral hemisphere was localized primarily in the PRh and frontal motor cortex. Likewise, similar patterns of Fos immunoreactivity were observed in both hemispheres of rats following kindling to one generalized clonic seizure from several limbic and paleocortical structures. These results suggest that the bilateral involvement of the PRh is critical in producing the bilateral behaviors associated with generalized clonic seizure expression. In support of this interpretation, infusion of 3 M KCl directly into the contralateral PRh of rats kindled to a single stage 4–5 (generalized clonic) seizure from the ipsilateral amygdala reduced seizure manifestations from a generalized clonic seizure (stage 4–5) to a unilateral clonic seizure (stage 3) without affecting measures of focal excitability. Taken together, these data indicate a role for the bilateral involvement of the PRh in generalized clonic seizure expression whether evoked from the naive or kindled state. These results further indicate that bilateral behaviors require the bilateral involvement of the structures necessary for the expression of these behaviors.

Keywords

kindling
perirhinal cortex
amygdala
generalized clonic seizure
Fos
spreading depression
rat.

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To whom correspondence and reprint requests should be addressed. Fax: (716) 275–8113. E-mail: [email protected]. rochester.edu.

☆☆

J. A. Wada