UW News

December 20, 2012

Mild brain cooling after head injury prevents epileptic seizures in lab study

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UW Medicine Newsroom

Mild cooling of the brain after a head injury prevents the later development of epileptic seizures, according to an animal study reported this month in the  Annals of Neurology

EEGs, a measurement of electrical activity in the brain, superimposed over images of the brain. The red boxes call out a possible epileptic episode. Image courtesy Raimondo D’Ambrosio.

Epilepsy can result from genetics or brain damage. Traumatic head injury is the leading cause of acquired epilepsy in young adults. It is often difficult to manage with antiepileptic drugs. The mechanisms  behind the onset of epileptic seizures after brain injury are not known . There is currently no treatment to cure it, prevent it, or even limit its severity.

The multi-institutional research team used a rodent model of acquired epilepsy in which animals develop chronic spontaneous recurrent seizures -the hallmark of epilepsy- after a contusive head injury similar to that causing epilepsy in humans.  The rats were randomized to either mock-cooling or cooling of the contused brain by no more than 2 Celsius degrees. This degree of cooling, the authors explained, is known to be safe and to decrease mortality of patients with head injury.  The rats  were then monitored for four months after injury and epilepsy was evaluated by intracranial EEG. The contused brain was cooled continuously with special headsets engineered to passively dissipate heat. No Peltier cells or other power sources for refrigeration were needed.

Color-coded temperature readings (digital thermography) from brain cooling devices.Raimondo D’Ambrosio

The investigators report that cooling by just 2 degrees celsius for 5 weeks beginning 3 days after injury virtually abolished the later development of epileptic seizure activity. This effect persisted through the end of the study. The treatment induced no additional pathology or inflammation, and restored neuronal activity depressed by the injury.

“These findings demonstrate for the first time that prevention of epileptic seizures after traumatic brain brain injury is possible, and that epilepsy prophylaxis in patients could be achieved more easily than previously thought, said  the lead author of the study,  Raimondo D’Ambrosio, UW associate professor of neurological surgery.  He added that a clinical trial is required to verify the findings in head injury patients.

In addition to D’Ambrosio,  the research team from the UW  included  John W. Miller, professor of neurology and director of the UW Regional Epilepsy Center;   Nancy R. Temkin, professor of neurological surgery and biostatistics; and  Jeffrey G. Ojemann, professor of neurological surgery. Other members of the team were  Steven M. Rothman, professor of pediatrics and director, Clinical Neurosciences in Pediatrics at the University of Minnesota  and  Matthew D. Smyth, professor of pediatrics and neurosurgery at Washington University in St. Louis.

Their project “Mild passive focal cooling prevents epileptic seizures after head injury in rats” was funded by CURE Epilepsy in partnership with the United States Army Medical Research and Materiel Command.