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Dive into the research topics where Asla Pitkänen is active.

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Featured researches published by Asla Pitkänen.


Experimental Neurology | 2007

Cyclicity of spontaneous recurrent seizures in pilocarpine model of temporal lobe epilepsy in rat

Karolien Goffin; Jari Nissinen; Koen Van Laere; Asla Pitkänen

Pilocarpine administration to rats results in status epilepticus (SE) and after a latency period to the occurrence of spontaneous seizures. The model is commonly used to investigate mechanisms of epileptogenesis as well as the antiepileptic effects of novel compounds. Surprisingly, there have been no video-EEG studies determining the duration of latency period from SE to the appearance of the first spontaneous seizures or the type and frequency of spontaneous seizures at early phase of pilocarpine-induced epilepsy even though such information is critical for design of such studies. To address these questions, we induced SE with pilocarpine in 29 adult male Wistar rats with cortical electrodes. Rats were continuously video-EEG monitored during SE and up to 23 days thereafter. The first spontaneous seizures occurred 7.2+/-3.6 days after SE. During the follow-up, the mean daily seizure frequency was 2.6+/-1.9, the mean seizure duration 47+/-7 s, and the mean behavioral seizure score 3.2+/-0.9. Typically first seizures were partial (score 1-2). Interestingly, spontaneous seizures occurred in clusters with cyclicity, peaking every 5 to 8 days. These data show that in the pilocarpine model of temporal lobe epilepsy the latency period is short. Because many of the early seizures are partial and the seizures occur in clusters, the true phenotype of epilepsy triggered by pilocarpine-induced SE may be difficult to characterize without continuous long-term video-EEG monitoring. Finally, our data suggest that the model can be used for studies aiming at identifying the mechanisms of seizure clustering.


Epilepsy Research | 2007

Effect of novel AMPA antagonist, NS1209, on status epilepticus An experimental study in rat

Asla Pitkänen; Claus Mathiesen; Lars Christian B. Rønn; Arne Møller; Jari Nissinen

The current first line treatment of status epilepticus (SE) is based on the use of compounds that enhance GABAergic transmission or block sodium channels. These treatments discontinue SE in only two-thirds of patients, and therefore new therapeutic approaches are needed. We investigated whether a novel water-soluble AMPA antagonist, NS1209, discontinues SE in adult rats. SE was induced by electrical stimulation of the amygdala or subcutaneous administration of kainic acid. Animals were monitored continuously with video-electroencephalography during SE and drug treatment. We found that NS1209 could be safely administered to rats undergoing electrically induced SE at doses up to 50mg/kg followed by intravenous infusion of 5mg/kg for up to 24h. NS1209 administered as a bolus dose of 10-50mg/kg (i.p. or i.v.) followed by infusion of 4 or 5mg/kg h (i.v.) for 2-24h effectively discontinued electrically induced SE in all animals within 30-60 min, and there was no recurrence of SE after a 24-h infusion. Kainate-induced SE was similarly blocked by 10 or 30 mg/kg NS1209 (i.v.). To compare the efficacy and neuroprotective effects of NS1209 with those of diazepam (DZP), one group of rats received DZP (20mg/kg, i.p. and another dose of 10 mg/kg 6h later). By using the administration protocols described, the anticonvulsant effect of NS1209 was faster and more complete than that of DZP. NS1209 treatment (20 mg/kg bolus followed by 5mg/kg h infusion for 24 h) was neuroprotective against SE-induced hippocampal neurodegeneration, but to a lesser extent than DZP. These findings suggest that AMPA receptor blockade by NS1209 provides a novel and mechanistically complimentary addition to the armamentarium of drugs used to treat SE in humans.


Peptides | 2007

Gene therapy in epilepsy: the focus on NPY.

Francesco Noé; Jari Nissinen; Asla Pitkänen; Marco Gobbi; Günther Sperk; Matthew J. During; Annamaria Vezzani

Gene therapy represents an innovative and promising alternative for the treatment of epileptic patients who are resistant to conventional antiepileptic drugs. Among the various approaches for the application of gene therapy in the treatment of CNS disorders, recombinant viral vectors have been most widely used so far. Several gene targets could be used to correct the compromized balance between inhibitory and excitatory transmission in epilepsy. Transduction of neuropeptide genes such as galanin and neuropeptide Y (NPY) in specific brain areas in experimental models of seizures resulted in significant anticonvulsant effects. In particular, the long-lasting NPY over-expression obtained in the rat hippocampus using intracerebral application of recombinant adeno-associated viral (AAV) vectors reduced the generalization of seizures from their site of onset, delayed acquisition of fully kindled seizures and afforded neuroprotection. These results establish a proof-of-principle for the applicability of AAV-NPY vectors for the inhibition of seizures in epilepsy. Additional investigations are required to demonstrate a therapeutic role of gene therapy in chronic models of seizures and to address in more detail safety concerns and possible side-effects.


Epilepsy Research | 2007

Effect of antiepileptic drugs on spontaneous seizures in epileptic rats

Jari Nissinen; Asla Pitkänen

The present study investigated whether spontaneously seizing animals are a valid model for evaluating antiepileptic compounds in the treatment of human epilepsy. We examined whether clinically effective antiepileptic drugs (AEDs), including carbamazepine (CBZ), valproic acid (VPA), ethosuximide (ESM), lamotrigine (LTG), or vigabatrin (VGB) suppress spontaneous seizures in a rat model of human temporal lobe epilepsy, in which epilepsy is triggered by status epilepticus induced by electrical stimulation of the amygdala. Eight adult male rats with newly diagnosed epilepsy and focal onset seizures were included in the study. Baseline seizure frequency was determined by continuous video-electroencephalography (EEG) monitoring during a 7 days baseline period. This was followed by a 2-3 days titration period, a 5-7 days treatment period, and a 2-3 days wash-out period. During the 5-7 days treatment period, animals were treated successively with CBZ (120 mg/kg/day), VPA (600 mg/kg/day), ESM (400 mg/kg/day), LTG (20 mg/kg/day), and VGB (250 mg/kg/day). VPA, LTG, and VGB were the most efficient of the compounds investigated, decreasing the mean seizure frequency by 83, 84, and 60%, respectively. In the VPA group, the percentage of rats with a greater than 50% decrease in seizure frequency was 100%, in the LTG group 88%, in the VGB group 83%, in the CBZ group 29%, and in the ESM group 38%. During the 7 day treatment period, 20% of the VPA-treated animals and 14% of the CBZ-treated animals became seizure-free. These findings indicate that rats with focal onset spontaneous seizures respond to the same AEDs as patients with focal onset seizures. Like in humans, the response to AEDs can vary substantially between animals. These observations support the idea that spontaneously seizing animals are a useful tool for testing novel compounds for the treatment of human epilepsy.


Epilepsia | 2007

Magnetic resonance imaging in animal models of epilepsy : Noninvasive detection of structural alterations

Olli Gröhn; Asla Pitkänen

Summary:u2002 Small animal magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) has opened a window through which brain abnormalities can be observed over time in rodents noninvasively. We review MRI studies done during epileptogenesis triggered by status epilepticus in rat. Most of these studies have used quantitative T2, diffusion, and/or volumetric MRI. The goal has been to identify the distribution and severity of structural lesions during the epileptogenic process, that is, soon after status epilepticus, during epileptogenesis, and after the appearance of spontaneous seizures. Data obtained demonstrate that MRI can be used to associate the development of brain pathology with the evolution of clinical phenotype. MRI can also be used to select animals to preclinical studies based on the severity and/or distribution of brain damage, thus making the study population more homogeneous, for example, for assessment of novel antiepileptogenic or neuroprotective treatments. Importantly, follow‐up data collected emphasize interindividual differences in the dynamics of development of abnormalities that could have remained undetected in a typical histologic analysis providing a snapshot to brain pathology. A great future challenge is to take advantage of interanimal variability in MRI in the development of surrogate markers for epilepsy or its comorbidities such as memory impairment. Understanding of molecular and cellular mechanisms underlying changes in various MRI techniques will help to better understand complex progressive pathological processes associated with epileptogenesis and epilepsy.


Neuroscience | 2007

Epileptogenesis after cortical photothrombotic brain lesion in rats

Heli Karhunen; Z. Bezvenyuk; Jari Nissinen; Juhani Sivenius; Jukka Jolkkonen; Asla Pitkänen

We investigated epileptogenesis after cortical photothrombotic stroke induced with Rose Bengal dye in adult Sprague-Dawley rats. To detect spontaneous seizures, video-electroencephalograms were recorded at 2, 4, 6, 8, and 10 months for 7-14 days (24 h/day). At the end, spatial and emotional learning and memory were assessed using the Morris water-maze and fear-conditioning test, respectively, and the brains were processed for histologic analysis. Seizures were detected in 18% of rats that received photothrombosis. The average seizure frequency was 0.39 seizures per recording day and mean seizure duration was 117 s. Over 60% of seizures occurred during the dark hours. Rats with photothrombotic lesions were impaired in the water-maze (P<0.05) but not in the fear-conditioning test as compared with controls. Histology revealed that lesion depth varied from cortical layers I to VI in photothrombotic rats with epilepsy. Epileptic rats had light mossy fiber sprouting in the inner molecular layer of the dentate gyrus both ipsilateral and contralateral to the lesion. This study extends the current understanding of epileptogenesis and functional impairment after cortical lesions induced by photothrombosis. Our observations support the hypothesis that photothrombotic stroke in rats is a useful animal model for investigating the mechanisms of post-stroke epileptogenesis.


Neuromolecular Medicine | 2007

Increased expression of caspase 2 in experimental and human temporal lobe epilepsy.

Susanna Narkilahti; Leena Jutila; Irina Alafuzoff; Kari Karkola; Leo Paljärvi; Arto Immonen; Matti Vapalahti; Esa Mervaala; Reetta Kälviäinen; Asla Pitkänen

Temporal lobe epilepsy (TLE) is often caused by a neurodegenerative brain insult that triggers epileptogenesis, and eventually results in spontaneous seizures, i.e., epilepsy. Understanding the mechanisms of cell death is a key for designing new drug therapies for preventing the neurodegeneration associated with TLE. Here, we investigated the expression of caspase 2, a protein involved in programmed cell death, during the course of epilepsy. We investigated caspase 2 expression in hippocampal samples derived from patients operated on for drug refractory TLE. To understand the evolution of altered-caspase 2 expression during the epileptic process, we also examined caspase 2 expression and activity in the rat hippocampus after status epilepticus-induced acute damage, during epileptogenesis, and after the onset of epilepsy. Caspase 2 expression was enhanced in the hippocampal neurons in chronic TLE patients. In rats, status epilepticus-induced caspase 2 labeling paralleled the progression of neurodegeneration. Proteolytic activation and cleavage of caspase 2 was also detected in the rat brain undergoing epileptogenesis. Our data suggest that caspase 2-mediated programmed cell death participates in the seizure-induced degenerative process in experimental and human TLE.


Brain | 2007

Quantitative diffusion MRI of hippocampus as a surrogate marker for post-traumatic epileptogenesis.

Irina Kharatishvili; Riikka Immonen; Olli Gröhn; Asla Pitkänen


Epileptic Disorders | 2007

Genetics of epilepsy: epilepsy research foundation workshop report.

Sanjay M. Sisodiya; J. Helen Cross; Ingmar Blümcke; David Chadwick; John Craig; Peter B. Crino; Paul Debenham; Norman Delanty; Frances Elmslie; Mark Gardiner; Jeffrey A. Golden; David B. Goldstein; David A. Greenberg; Renzo Guerrini; Michael G. Hanna; John Harris; Paul Harrison; Michael R. Johnson; George Kirov; Dimitri M. Kullman; Andrew Makoff; Carla Marini; Rima Nabbout; Lina Nashef; Jeffrey L. Noebels; Ruth Ottman; Munir Pirmohamed; Asla Pitkänen; Ingrid E. Scheffer; Simon Shorvon


Restorative Neurology and Neuroscience | 2007

The novel antiepileptic agent RWJ-333369-A, but not its analog RWJ-333369, reduces regional cerebral edema without affecting neurobehavioral outcome or cell death following experimental traumatic brain injury

Carrie A. Keck; Hilaire J. Thompson; Asla Pitkänen; David G. LeBold; Diego M. Morales; Jamie B. Plevy; Rishi Puri; Boyu Zhao; Marc A. Dichter; Tracy K. McIntosh

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Jari Nissinen

Katholieke Universiteit Leuven

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Olli Gröhn

University of Eastern Finland

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Karolien Goffin

Katholieke Universiteit Leuven

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Koen Van Laere

Katholieke Universiteit Leuven

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Arto Immonen

University of Eastern Finland

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Esa Mervaala

University of Eastern Finland

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Irina Kharatishvili

University of Eastern Finland

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Juhani Sivenius

University of Eastern Finland

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Jukka Jolkkonen

University of Eastern Finland

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Katarzyna Majak

University of Eastern Finland

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