On 2017 Jul 07, DANIEL BARTH commented:
The possible role of spike-wave discharges (SWDs) in epilepsy is a highly controversial. Although we expected our work to generate debate, the eLetter from Blumenfeld et al. is disappointing.
For a more detailed response to this eLetter, please see: https://www.dropbox.com/s/d8ut94ayf57f8pk/Response to responseBlumenfeld et al2017.pdf?dl=0
- Partial consciousness and maintenance of cognitive functions during SWD
eLetter: “Their logic appears to be based on the misperception that seizures in absence epilepsy (AE) are always associated with ‘profound impairment of consciousness,’ leading to the flawed premise of the study and its interpretation that anything less than full loss of consciousness must not be AE.”
Loss of conscious is stipulated as an inclusion criterion for diagnosis of typical childhood absence epilepsy, versus mild or no impairment of consciousness as an exclusion criterion (Loiseau and Panayiotopoulos, 2000; Engle, 2013). Accordingly, we characterized WAG/Rij rats as mild absence with partial impairment of consciousness during seizures.
eLetter: “The ‘ability’ to modulate SWD severity in rodent models is not demonstrated since the reduction in number and duration can be explained otherwise.” The alternative explanation put forward is “a sensory cue white noise, which may increase arousal and vigilance known to reduce SWD”.
We stated that operantly conditioned arousal is what terminates SWD bursts early. The possibility that the arousal is due only to the white noise cue, however, fails to account for the critical result that preemptive pellet checks occurred almost entirely in the seconds after each SWD burst, indicating awareness of the SWD, associative learning, and operant control over SWDs.
- SWDs occur in several rodent strains
eLetter: Blumenfeld et al. note SWDs are not observed in most laboratory rodent strains.
That is not correct. Observations of SWDs are common in outbred Sprague Dawley, Long Evans, Wistar and hooded rats. Unlike human absence epilepsy, SWDs become more prevalent with age). Our conclusion is not that SWDs cannot reflect absence epilepsy, but that their ubiquity in various outbred rat strains suggests their unreliability as a signature of absence epilepsy. We have no vested interest in whether SWDs are genetic epilepsy or part of normal rat behavior. We simply recommend caution that Blumenfeld et al. appear opposed to.
eLetter: Single gene mutations can lead to SWDs therefore absence epilepsy. We note that while genes can influence innate rhythms, this does not prove that all SWDs are epileptic or that all SWDs model genetic absence seizures. Furthermore, inbreeding does not seem to be a requirement for SWDs, since our outbred Sprague Dawley rats had the same amount of SWDs as our inbred WAG/Rij rats, and Long Evans rats had approximately four times this amount (Fig. 7).
- SWD/immobility as a model of absence epilepsy
Blumenfeld et al list characteristics that support SWDs as a model of absence epilepsy. We do not understand why they are raising this issue, since we clearly stated that inbred WAG/Rij rats model mild absence seizures in humans.
We believe, however, the case that all SWDs in outbred rats serve to model genetic absence seizures in humans is weak. We and others remain skeptical that most outbred rats have developed - or are developing - absence epilepsy; however, as we said, it is possible.
Conclusion
The eLetter by Blumenfeld et al. was written by experts with decades of publications in absence epilepsy. We have examined many of these papers, plus ones challenging the epileptic nature of SWDs (e.g. Kaplan, 1985; Wiest and Nicolelis, 2003). None of us have studied absence seizures or SWDs, except recently (Rodgers et al., 2015). The research history and publication record of Blumenfeld et al., however, could incline them toward an imbalanced interpretation of our results. We do not understand what specifically were the “overstatements” and inappropriate “assumptions” in Taylor et al. that Blumenfeld et al. claimed in the beginning of their eLetter. We urge readers to re-read our Significance Statement in the context of the eLetter by Blumenfeld et al.: “Our evidence that inbred and outbred rats learn to control the duration of spike–wave discharges (SWDs) suggests a voluntary behavior with maintenance of consciousness. If SWDs model mild absence seizures and/or complex partial seizures in humans, then an opportunity may exist for operant control complementing or in some cases replacing medication. Their equal occurrence in outbred rats also implies a major potential confound for behavioral neuroscience experiments, at least in adult rats where SWDs are prevalent. Alternatively, the presence and voluntary control of SWDs in healthy outbred rats could indicate that these phenomena do not always model heritable absence epilepsy or post-traumatic epilepsy in humans, and may instead reflect typical rodent behavior.”
While writing and revising this manuscript in response to successive peer reviews, we responded to the points of Blumenfeld et al. and tried to objectively incorporate reviewers’ suggestions and avoid misinterpretations of our data. We are disappointed that our efforts were either largely ignored or misrepresented in the eLetter, since this unnecessarily complicates an already controversial subject and detracts from what we believe is the importance of this work.
References
Engle, J, Jr. (2013) Seizures and Epilepsy, 2nd ed. New York ; London: Oxford University Press. Kaplan BJ (1985) The epileptic nature of rodent electrocortical polyspiking is still unproven. Exp Neurol 88:425–436. Loiseau, P, Panayiotopoulos, CP (2000) Childhood absence epilepsy. In: Neurobase. San Diego: Arbor. Rodgers KM, Dudek FE, Barth DS (2015) Progressive, seizure-Like, spike-Wave discharges are common in both Injured and uninjured Sprague-Dawley rats: Implications for the fluid percussion injury model of post-traumatic epilepsy. J Neurosci 35:9194–9204. Wiest MC, Nicolelis MAL (2003) Behavioral detection of tactile stimuli during 7-12 Hz cortical oscillations in awake rats. Nat Neurosci 6:913–914.
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