Experimental febrile seizures are precipitated by a hyperthermia-induced respiratory alkalosis

Author:  ["Sebastian Schuchmann","Dietmar Schmitz","Claudio Rivera","Sampsa Vanhatalo","Benedikt Salmen","Ken Mackie","Sampsa T Sipilä","Juha Voipio","Kai Kaila"]

Publication:  Nature Medicine

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Tags:     Medicine

Abstract

Febrile seizures are frequent during early childhood, and prolonged (complex) febrile seizures are associated with an increased susceptibility to temporal lobe epilepsy. The pathophysiological consequences of febrile seizures have been extensively studied in rat pups exposed to hyperthermia. The mechanisms that trigger these seizures are unknown, however. A rise in brain pH is known to enhance neuronal excitability. Here we show that hyperthermia causes respiratory alkalosis in the immature brain, with a threshold of 0.2–0.3 pH units for seizure induction. Suppressing alkalosis with 5% ambient CO2 abolished seizures within 20 s. CO2 also prevented two long-term effects of hyperthermic seizures in the hippocampus: the upregulation of the Ih current and the upregulation of CB1 receptor expression. The effects of hyperthermia were closely mimicked by intraperitoneal injection of bicarbonate. Our work indicates a mechanism for triggering hyperthermic seizures and suggests new strategies in the research and therapy of fever-related epileptic syndromes.

Cite this article

Schuchmann, S., Schmitz, D., Rivera, C. et al. Experimental febrile seizures are precipitated by a hyperthermia-induced respiratory alkalosis. Nat Med 12, 817–823 (2006). https://doi.org/10.1038/nm1422

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