New direction for epilepsy treatment
If common anticonvulsant drugs fail to manage epileptic seizures, then perhaps the anti-inflammatory* route is the way to go. That's according to Mattia Maroso and colleagues from the Mario Negri Institute for Pharmacological Research in Milan, Italy, who found that giving mice repeated doses of a specific enzyme inhibitor significantly reduced both chronic epileptic activity and acute seizures. Their findings, published online in the Springer journal Neurotherapeutics, open up the possibility of a new target system for anticonvulsant drug intervention, to control epileptic activity that does not respond to certain anticonvulsant treatments. An enzyme known as ICE/Caspase-1 is involved in epileptic seizures; it induces inflammatory processes by producing IL-1beta, a pro-inflammatory molecule, in brain regions where epileptic activity originates and spreads. Mattia Maroso and colleagues looked at the elective inhibitor for this enzyme, in a mouse model of acute seizures and in mice with chronic epilepsy showing spontaneous recurrent epileptic activity.
The researchers artificially induced chronic epileptic seizures in 21 adult male mice and acute seizures in 46 mice. They then injected them with the enzyme inhibitor (VX-765) and recorded the resulting epileptic activity in brains of the mice.
They found that the enzyme inhibitor had powerful anticonvulsant effects. Repeated systemic administration reduced chronic epileptic activity in mice in a dose-dependent manner, and the effect was reversible after four days of treatment when the drug regime was discontinued. The same dose regimen also reduced acute seizures in the mice.
The authors conclude: "Our results support a new target system for anticonvulsant drug intervention. Our findings open new perspectives for the clinical use of this anti-inflammatory strategy for treating established drug-resistant epileptic conditions."
Source: Springer
Related
- Drug prevents seizure progression in model of epilepsyMon, 4 May 2009, 12:43:50 EDT
- Anti-cholesterol drugs could help stave off seizures: UBC-Vancouver Coastal Health researchMon, 25 Oct 2010, 16:53:47 EDT
- Scripps research study opens the door to new class of drugs for epileptic seizuresThu, 29 Jul 2010, 10:09:35 EDT
- Possible link between different forms of epilepsy found by Carnegie Mellon scientistsMon, 16 Jun 2008, 11:42:31 EDT
- Autoinjectors offer way to treat prolonged seizuresWed, 15 Feb 2012, 23:33:05 EST
Other sources
- New direction for epilepsy treatmentfrom Science CentricTue, 29 Mar 2011, 12:40:15 EDT
- New direction for epilepsy treatment: Study in mice highlights alternative anti-inflammatory approach to epilepsy managementfrom Science DailyMon, 28 Mar 2011, 10:30:57 EDT
- New direction for epilepsy treatmentfrom PhysorgMon, 28 Mar 2011, 9:30:42 EDT
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