Abstract
Stress is among the most frequently self‐reported factors provoking epileptic seizures in children and adults. It is still unclear though, why some people display stress‐sensitive seizures while others don't. Recently, we showed that young epilepsy patients with stress‐sensitive seizures exhibit a dysregulated hypothalamus‐pituitary‐adrenal (HPA)‐axis. Most likely, this dysregulation gradually develops, and is triggered by stressors occurring early in life (ELS). ELS may be particularly impactful when overlapping with the period of epileptogenesis.
To examine this in a controlled and prospective manner, the current study investigated the effect of repetitive variable stressors or control treatment between postnatal day (PND) 12 and 24 in male mice exposed on PND10 to hyperthermia (HT)‐induced prolonged seizures (control: normothermia (NT)). A number of peripheral and central indices of HPA‐axis activity were evaluated at pre‐adolescent and young adult age, i.e. at PND25 and 90 respectively.
At PND25 but not at PND90, body weight gain and absolute as well as relative (to body weight) thymus weight were reduced by ELS (versus control) while relative adrenal weight was enhanced, confirming the effectiveness of the stress treatment. Basal and stress‐induced corticosterone levels were unaffected, though, by ELS at both ages. HT by itself did not affect any of these peripheral markers of HPA‐axis activity nor did it interact with ELS. However, centrally we did observe age‐specific interaction effects of HT and ELS with regard to hippocampal glucocorticoid receptor (GR) mRNA expression, neurogenesis with the immature neuron marker doublecortin and the number of hilar (ectopic) granule cells using Prox1 staining. This lends some support to the notion that exposure to repetitive stress after HT‐induced seizures may dysregulate central components of the stress system in an age‐dependent manner. Such dysregulation could be one of the mechanisms conferring higher vulnerability of individuals with epilepsy to develop seizures in the face of stress.
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