Intracellular and field potential recordings were obtained from superficial and deep neurons from both intact coronal rat somatosensory slices, and from slices which had been acutely divided into a superficial strip of cortex (similar to 450 mu m from the pia) and a deep segment. Membrane properties for cells in the traumatized slices were similar to those of their counterparts in intact slices. However, synaptic hyperexcitability developed in the deep segments in which a majority of cells likely underwent dendrotomy. This hyperexcitability was manifested by epileptiform activity in 54% of traumatized slices. Measurements of fast GABAergic inhibitory strength showed these slices were disinhibited. Superficial delivery of tetrodotoxin to the upper 450 mu m of intact slices led to disinhibition of fast GABAergic transmission as well as an attendant increase in excitatory postsynaptic potential strength but not epileptogenesis. Pharmacological maneuvers aimed at preventing glutamate-triggered increases in intracellular calcium [glutamate ionotropic antagonists, dantrolene, and bis-(o-aminophenoxy)-N,N,N',N'-tetraacetic acid (BAPTA)-AM] showed that a 1 h treatment in these agents conferred protection against epileptogenesis. These results demonstrate that the seizure-like activity developing in deep dendrotomized cortical segments resulted from two sources of GABAergic disinhibition: the physical removal of important superficial inhibitory circuits and glutamate-triggered increases in intracellular calcium.