from Section 1 - Chronic models in intact animals – concepts and questions
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 03 May 2010
Models of the epilepsies have been developed to address a variety of different issues. Although much of the current focus in epilepsy research is on the cellular and molecular mechanisms underlying abnormal activities of the central nervous system (CNS), the usefulness of such information becomes clear only within a larger context that is provided most valuably by intact-animal models of the epilepsies. Chapters 1 to 5 provide an introduction to some of the issues that can be addressed effectively using intact-animal models. The discussions concerning these models make it clear that we can learn a great deal simply from careful examination of the intact animal – from characterization of behavioral seizures, as well as from electroencephalographic (EEG) phenomenology. These discussions also illustrate a major advantage of studying ‘epilepsy’ in animal models, as opposed to examining the epilepsies directly in human clinical material – the ability to control what appear to be a large number of relevant variables.
Control of the stimuli that initiate the epileptogenic process is a feature of kindling that has made this model perhaps the most widely used of all the current intact animal approaches to studies of the epilepsies. McNamara, one of the leaders in investigation of the kindling model (McNamara et al, 1985), lays out a number of salient features of this model – both technical and conceptual (Chapter 1, this volume).
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