KA rats with tonic–clonic seizures showed blunted hypercapnic ventilatory and heart rate responses and absent HRV reactivity, unlike GAERS and controls.
Does seizure phenotype affect hypercapnic cardioventilatory and autonomic responses during a standardized CO2 challenge in rat models of epilepsy?
Male rats divided into 3 groups: kainic acid (KA; tonic-clonic seizure model), GAERS (generalized absence seizure model), and healthy Wistar controls.
1-hour 10% CO2 exposure (standardized CO2 challenge)
Healthy Wistar controls and cross-comparison between epilepsy models (KA vs GAERS)
Ventilatory frequency (fB), heart rate (HR), and heart-rate variability (HRV) before, during, and after CO2 exposuresurrogate
Seizure-type specific disruption of chemoreflex-autonomic integration occurs in epilepsy models, suggesting that combined ventilatory and heart rate variability testing could refine SUDEP risk stratification.
Sudden Unexpected Death in Epilepsy (SUDEP) is linked to respiratory and autonomic failure with post-ictal periods of prolonged hypercapnia indicative of impaired central chemoreception. Yet how interictal hypercapnic cardioventilatory responses vary by seizure phenotype is unclear. We aimed to determine whether central chemoreception and autonomic regulation differ across epilepsy phenotypes during a standardized CO₂ challenge. We hypothesized that rats with chronic generalized tonic–clonic seizures would show impaired hypercapnic cardioventilatory and autonomic responses compared with rats with generalized absence seizures and healthy controls. We measured ventilatory frequency (fB), heart rate (HR), and heart-rate variability (HRV) before, during, and after a 1hour 10 % CO₂ exposure in 3 groups of male rats: kainic acid (KA; tonic–clonic), GAERS (absence), and Wistar controls. Controls showed increased fB and decreased HR during hypercapnia. KA rats exhibited blunted fB and HR responses; GAERS displayed preserved fB elevation with faster post-challenge normalization and intermediate HR changes. Coupling of fB and HR collapsed during CO₂ in both epilepsy groups and re-emerged in recovery. In KA rats, stage 3–4 seizure burden positively correlated with HR during hypercapnia. HRV reactivity to hypercapnia was robust in controls, attenuated in GAERS, and largely absent in KA, while interictal baseline HRV did not differ among groups. These data support seizure-type–specific disruption of chemoreflex–autonomic integration. Extending clinical hypercapnic ventilatory response (HCVR) testing, a hypercapnic cardioventilatory response (HCCVR), i.e. a combined fB, HR, and HRV readout may help to refine SUDEP risk stratification beyond seizure frequency and type.
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Ayse Dereli
Auriane Apaire
Enrique Ignacio Germany Morrison
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Dereli et al. (Thu,) reported a other. KA rats with tonic–clonic seizures showed blunted hypercapnic ventilatory and heart rate responses and absent HRV reactivity, unlike GAERS and controls.
www.synapsesocial.com/papers/6992b4779b75e639e9b096f0 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1002/epi.70123