Nucleus accumbens shell lesions alleviate symptoms in kainic
acid-induced epileptic rats
- shuaishuai xue

shuaishuai xue

Southern Medical University
Corresponding Author:xuess526@163.com
Author ProfileAbstract
Epilepsy is a recurrent neurological disease caused by hypersynchronous
firing of neurons in the brain. Neuronal apoptosis, microgliosis, or
astrogliosis in hippocampus are considered to be important features of
temporal lobe epilepsy. As an important part of the ventral striatum,
the nucleus accumbens is closely connected to the hippocampus. As the
findings of the reviewed articles indicated, the nuleus accumbens is
divided into the shell and the core. The nucleus accumbens shell is a
relevant brain region to process reward-related and motivated
behaviours, emotional process and social information. Nucleus accumbens
shell has a good application effect in the field of drug addiction and
mania. Our previous studies have shown that the nucleus accumbens shows
abnormal excitation after seizures. In our previous experiments, the
number of seizures decreased when this excitation was disrupted.
However, the mechanisms of action of Nucleus accumbens shell lesions
remain unclear. In this paper, we explored the hippocampal changes
inhibited by nucleus accumbens lesions on the basis of the kainic acid
animal model of epilepsy. We explored the anti-epileptic effect and
mechanism of action of electrical lesions in nucleus accumbens, and
found that the mechanism may be to reduce the toxic effects caused by
the proliferation of astrocytes and microglia in the hippocampus. It can
also inhibit the reduction of neurons and thus play a role in
controlling seizures. These results suggest that the nucleus accumbens
plays an important role in inhibiting seizures.