Gliomas and seizures
Document Type
Article
Publication Date
9-4-2012
Publication Title
Medical Hypotheses
Abstract
Glial neoplasms account for nearly 50% of all adult primary brain tumors. They originate from glial cells in the brain and/or spinal cord and include low-grade diffuse astrocytomas, anaplastic-astrocytomas, and glioblastomas. Of all brain tumors, glioblastoma multiforme (GBM) is the most aggressive and is characterized by rapid glial cell growth, resistance to radio- and chemo- therapies, and relentless infiltration and spreading throughout the central nervous system (CNS). In glioblastomas, primary tumor growth and CNS invasion are associated with the activation of complex structural molecular and metabolic changes within the tumor tissue, which profoundly affect the surrounding neuronal networks and may in part explain induction of epilepsy. In fact, epileptic seizures are very common among patients with glial tumors, reaching nearly 50% in glioblastoma patients and almost 90% in low-grade astrocytomas. The overall hypothesis presented here discusses the possibility that the aberrant tumor cell metabolism may act directly on neuronal network, and this leads to seizure susceptibility. Further invasion and growth of the malignant glial cells exacerbate this initial pathologic state which promotes recurrent seizures (epileptogenesis).
First Page
622
Last Page
626
PubMed ID
22959996
Volume
79
Issue
5
Recommended Citation
Prakash, O; Lukiw, W. J.; Peruzzi, F; Reiss, K; and Musto, A. E., "Gliomas and seizures" (2012). School of Medicine Faculty Publications. 2009.
https://digitalscholar.lsuhsc.edu/som_facpubs/2009
10.1016/j.mehy.2012.07.037.