Anticonvulsant properties of acetone, a brain ketone elevated by the ketogenic diet

被引:115
作者
Likhodii, SS
Serbanescu, I
Cortez, MA
Murphy, P
Snead, OC
Burnham, WM
机构
[1] Univ Toronto, Fac Med, Dept Pharmacol, Toronto, ON M5S 1A8, Canada
[2] Univ Toronto, Fac Med, Bloorview Epilepsy Res Program, Toronto, ON, Canada
[3] Hosp Sick Children, Brain & Behav Program, Div Neurol, Toronto, ON M5G 1X8, Canada
[4] Hosp Sick Children, Dept Pediat, Toronto, ON M5G 1X8, Canada
关键词
D O I
10.1002/ana.10634
中图分类号
R74 [神经病学与精神病学];
学科分类号
摘要
The ketogenic diet (KD), a treatment for drug-resistant epilepsy, elevates brain acetone. Acetone has been shown to suppress experimental seizures. Whether elevation of acetone is the basis of the anticonvulsant effects of the KD and whether acetone, like the KD, antagonizes many different types of seizures, however, is unknown. This study investigated the spectrum of the anticonvulsant effects of acetone in animal seizure models. Rats were injected with acetone intraperitoneally. Dose-response effects were measured in four different models: (1) the maximal electroshock test, which models human tonic-clonic seizures; (2) the subcutaneous pentylenetetrazole test, which models human typical absence seizures; (3) the amygdala kindling test, which models human complex partial seizures with secondary generalization; and (4) the AY-9944 test, which models chronic atypical absence seizures, a component of the Lennox-Gastaut syndrome. Acetone suppressed seizures in all of the models, with the following ED50's (expressed in mmol/kg): maximal electroshock, 6.6; pentylenetetrazole, 9.7; generalized kindled seizures, 13.1; focal kindled seizures, 26.5; AY-9944, 4.0. Acetone appears to have a broad spectrum of anticonvulsant effects. These effects parallel the effects of the KD. Elevation of brain acetone therefore may account for the efficacy of the KD in intractable epilepsy.
引用
收藏
页码:219 / 226
页数:8
相关论文
共 55 条
[1]   DEVELOPMENT OF A NEW PHARMACOLOGICAL SEIZURE MODEL - EFFECTS OF ANTICONVULSANTS ON CORTICAL-KINDLED AND AMYGDALA-KINDLED SEIZURES IN THE RAT [J].
ALBRIGHT, PS ;
BURNHAM, WM .
EPILEPSIA, 1980, 21 (06) :681-689
[2]  
Bridge EM, 1931, B JOHNS HOPKINS HOSP, V48, P373
[3]  
CONKLIN HW, 1922, AM J OSTEO ASS, V22, P11
[4]   Brain sterols in the AY-9944 rat model of atypical absence seizures [J].
Cortez, MA ;
Cunnane, SC ;
Snead, OC .
EPILEPSIA, 2002, 43 (01) :3-8
[5]   A model of atypical absence seizures - EEG, pharmacology, and developmental characterization [J].
Cortez, MA ;
McKerlie, C ;
Snead, OC .
NEUROLOGY, 2001, 56 (03) :341-349
[6]   Lennox-Gastaut syndrome [J].
Crumrine, PK .
JOURNAL OF CHILD NEUROLOGY, 2002, 17 :S70-S75
[7]   PLASMA LIPIDS IN EPILEPTIC CHILDREN TREATED WITH HIGH FAT DIET [J].
DEKABAN, AS .
ARCHIVES OF NEUROLOGY, 1966, 15 (02) :177-&
[8]  
DRIVER RL, 1947, P SOC EXP BIOL MED, V64, P248
[9]   ANIMAL-MODELS OF THE EPILEPSIES [J].
FISHER, RS .
BRAIN RESEARCH REVIEWS, 1989, 14 (03) :245-278
[10]  
Frantik E, 1996, Cent Eur J Public Health, V4, P226