Sodium cromoglycate reduces short- and long-term consequences of status epilepticus in rats

Publication date: Available online 13 August 2018Source: Epilepsy & BehaviorAuthor(s): María Guadalupe Valle-Dorado, César Emmanuel Santana-Gómez, Sandra Adela Orozco-Suárez, Luisa RochaAbstractSeveral studies indicate that sodium cromoglycate (CG) induces neuroprotective effects in acute neurological conditions. The present study focused on investigating if the use of CG in rats during the post-status epilepticus (post-SE) period reduces the acute and long-term consequences of seizure activity. Our results revealed that animals that received a single dose of CG (50 mg/kg s.c.: subcutaneously) during the post-SE period showed a lower number of neurons in the process of dying in the dentate gyrus, hilus, cornu ammonis 1 (CA1), and CA3 of the dorsal hippocampus than the rats that received the vehicle. However, this effect was not evident in layers V–VI of the sensorimotor cortex or the lateral-posterior thalamic nucleus. A second experiment showed that animals that received CG subchronically (50 mg/kg s.c. every 12 h for 5 days followed by 24 mg/kg/day s.c. for 14 days using osmotic minipumps) after SE presented fewer generalized convulsive seizures and less neuronal damage in the lateral-posterior thalamic nucleus but not in the hippocampus or cortex. Our data indicate that CG can be used as a therapeutic strategy to reduce short- and long-term neuronal damage in the hippocampus and thalamus, respectively. The data also indicate that CG can reduce the express...
Source: Epilepsy and Behavior - Category: Neurology Source Type: research
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