Abstract: | Krushinskii-Molodkina (KM) strain rats genetically predisposed to audiogenic convulsive reaction were given repeated camphor injections in gradually increasing doses (starting at the minimum threshold level required for seizures to occur) over a 4–5 month period. Animals were able to tolerate camphor at doses 3/2–3 times convulsion threshold level without seizure occurring once habituation to the action of this convulsant had been developed. At the same time, the cortical motor zone of strain KM rats acquired properties typical of an epileptic focus: spontaneous epileptiform firing peaks were noted in the background electrical activity of this zone. A decline in the parameter reflecting efficacy of the mechanisms underlying recurrent inhibition emerged in the cortical motor zone of strain KM rats receiving camphor from calculating the parameters of neuronal network from spectra of summated potentials (using the model of a neuronal network). It is suggested that the development of compensatory processes making it possible to avoid generalized seizure following administration of camphor in large doses is associated with intensification of inhibitory caudate function and attenuated hippocampal excitation.Institute of Higher Nervous Activity and Neurophysiology, Academy of Sciences of the USSR, Moscow. Translated from Neirofiziologiya, Vol. 22, No. 2, pp. 193–200, March–April, 1990. |