2014
DOI: 10.1007/s13311-013-0250-1
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Searching for the Ideal Antiepileptogenic Agent in Experimental Models: Single Treatment Versus Combinatorial Treatment Strategies

Abstract: A major unmet medical need is the lack of treatments to prevent (or modify) epilepsy in patients at risk, for example, after epileptogenic brain insults such as traumatic brain injury, stroke, or prolonged acute symptomatic seizures like complex febrile seizures or status epilepticus. Typically, following such brain insults there is a seizure-free interval ("latent period"), lasting months to years before the onset of spontaneous recurrent epileptic seizures. The latent period after a brain insult offers a win… Show more

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Cited by 78 publications
(57 citation statements)
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“…WAG/Rij rats are currently considered a plausible model of absence epileptogenesis or more generally, a genetic animal model of epileptogenesis (Blumenfeld et al, 2008;Giblin and Blumenfeld, 2010;White and Loscher, 2014). This point is strongly supported by the recent clinical data demonstrating a potential antiepileptogenic effect of EHT in childhood absence epilepsy, similarly to its effects in this strain (Berg et al, 2014;Blumenfeld et al, 2008).…”
Section: Current Limitations and Future Directionsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…WAG/Rij rats are currently considered a plausible model of absence epileptogenesis or more generally, a genetic animal model of epileptogenesis (Blumenfeld et al, 2008;Giblin and Blumenfeld, 2010;White and Loscher, 2014). This point is strongly supported by the recent clinical data demonstrating a potential antiepileptogenic effect of EHT in childhood absence epilepsy, similarly to its effects in this strain (Berg et al, 2014;Blumenfeld et al, 2008).…”
Section: Current Limitations and Future Directionsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In the more recent years, as a first choice approach for seizure control, pharmacology has not brought into clinical practice the same successes reported in pre-clinical trials (Loscher and Schmidt, 2002). One possible reason for such failure relies on the fact that most AEDs are tested in animal models that not completely mimic human TLE and are mostly based in acute, chemically-or electrically-evoked seizures (Bialer and White 2010;Loscher and Schmidt, 2011;White and Loscher, 2014).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In conclusion, fingolimod might be considered a promising antiepileptogenic treatment on the basis of the current view of the several unmet needs in this field [4,5,85]; however, further experiments are needed in order to clarify the exact mechanism(s) by which fingolimod exerts these potentially beneficial effects in this neurological disorder …”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…"Repurposing" drugs already approved for other diseases could however, lead to new insights into the epileptogenic process [1]. Accordingly, different commercially available drugs such as those acting on immune and inflammatory mechanisms have been tested in different preclinical models of epilepsy [5][6][7]. Increasing knowledge suggests that the immune system and inflammation are involved in the pathogenesis of epilepsy, thereby representing potentially suitable targets to develop novel disease-modifying drugs [8].…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%