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Galvan, Martin; Grafe, Peter und Ten Bruggencate, Gerrit (1982): Convulsant actions of 4-aminopyridine on the guinea-pig olfactory cortex slice. In: Brain Research, Bd. 241, Nr. 1: S. 75-86 [PDF, 932kB]

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Abstract

The effects of bath-applied 4-aminopyridine on neurones and extracellular potassium and calcium concentrations were recorded in slices of guinea-pig olfactory cortex. Neurones were orthodromically activated by stimulating the lateral olfactory tract. 4-Aminopyridine (3–10 μM) had the following effects: (1) an increase in the frequency and amplitude of spontaneous postsynaptic potentials: (2) a prolongation and oscillatory behaviour or orthodromically evoked postsynaptic potentials; (3) induction of spontaneous or stimulus-evoked seizure-type discharges which were accompanied by large rises in extracellular potassium and falls in calcium concentration; (4) a prolongation of the lateral olfactory tract population fibre spike. Prior to paroxysmal depolarization, membrane potential, input resistance and soma spike duration were unaffected. In the seconds before seizure discharges, a late hyperpolarizing potential (evoked by orthodromic stimulation) was reduced in amplitude or abolished. Diphenylhydantoin (50 μM) or magnesium ions (5 mM) prevented paroxysmal activity. Our results whow that 4-aminopyridine can produce seizure-type discharges in a brain slice preparation. The role of increased spontaneous potentials and possible loss of synaptic inhibition as causal factors for such discharges is discussed.

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