Selected Molecular Targets for Antiepileptogenesis.
Marek J PawlikBarbara MiziakAleksandra WalczakAgnieszka KonarzewskaMagdalena Chrościńska-KrawczykJan AlbrechtStanisław J CzuczwarPublished in: International journal of molecular sciences (2021)
The term epileptogenesis defines the usually durable process of converting normal brain into an epileptic one. The resistance of a significant proportion of patients with epilepsy to the available pharmacotherapy prompted the concept of a causative treatment option consisting in stopping or modifying the progress of epileptogenesis. Most antiepileptic drugs possess only a weak or no antiepileptogenic potential at all, but a few of them appear promising in this regard; these include, for example, eslicarbazepine (a sodium and T-type channel blocker), lamotrigine (a sodium channel blocker and glutamate antagonist) or levetiracetam (a ligand of synaptic vehicle protein SV2A). Among the approved non-antiepileptic drugs, antiepileptogenic potential seems to reside in losartan (a blocker of angiotensin II type 1 receptors), biperiden (an antiparkinsonian drug), nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs, antioxidative drugs and minocycline (a second-generation tetracycline with anti-inflammatory and antioxidant properties). Among other possible antiepileptogenic compounds, antisense nucleotides have been considered, among these an antagomir targeting microRNA-134. The drugs and agents mentioned above have been evaluated in post-status epilepticus models of epileptogenesis, so their preventive efficacy must be verified. Limited clinical data indicate that biperiden in patients with brain injuries is well-tolerated and seems to reduce the incidence of post-traumatic epilepsy. Exceptionally, in this regard, our own original data presented here point to c-Fos as an early seizure duration, but not seizure intensity-related, marker of early epileptogenesis. Further research of reliable markers of early epileptogenesis is definitely needed to improve the process of designing adequate antiepileptogenic therapies.
Keyphrases
- temporal lobe epilepsy
- angiotensin ii
- angiotensin converting enzyme
- anti inflammatory
- vascular smooth muscle cells
- electronic health record
- anti inflammatory drugs
- white matter
- drug induced
- big data
- oxidative stress
- machine learning
- risk factors
- preterm infants
- human health
- emergency department
- smoking cessation
- drug delivery
- multiple sclerosis
- replacement therapy
- adverse drug
- binding protein