ePoster

DECIPHERING AUTONOMIC DYSREGULATION IN EPILEPSY THROUGH VAGUS NERVE ACTIVITY

Elise Collardand 3 co-authors

Université Catholique de Louvain

FENS Forum 2026 (2026)
Barcelona, Spain
Board PS06-09PM-139

Presentation

Date TBA

Board: PS06-09PM-139

Poster preview

DECIPHERING AUTONOMIC DYSREGULATION IN EPILEPSY THROUGH VAGUS NERVE ACTIVITY poster preview

Event Information

Poster Board

PS06-09PM-139

Abstract


Figure 1. Hypercapnia-Induced Changes in cVNA Over Time. a) Typical recording of cervical Vagal Nerve Activity (cVNA) during baseline, hypercapnia, and recovery in a NEC control rat and an 11.5-month-old GAERS. Black traces are the control extraneural recordings, and colored traces are the intraneural VNA recordings for both animals, NEC in blue and GAERS in red. Signals' visuals have been band-pass filtered to 500–5000 Hz, and all extracts have been selected from calm, steady rats to ensure comparability. b) cVNA dynamics during hypercapnia. Normalized VNA spike density is shown for GAERS rats at 4.5 months (N=7; light red squares), GAERS rats at 11.5 months (N=7; dark red squares), and NEC rats at 11.5 months (N=9; blue circles) across baseline (0–60 min), hypercapnia (65–120 min), and recovery (125–180 min). Each symbol represents the group mean normalized VNA spike density in 5-minute bins; error bars indicate ± SEM.Previous findings from our laboratory showed that vagus nerve activity (VNA) during absence seizures in GAERS (Genetic Absence Epilepsy Rats from Strasbourg) rats varies with cumulative seizure burden, suggesting parasympathetic dysfunction. Respiratory disturbances such as apnea are a major concern in epilepsy and SUDEP, and hypercapnia represents a powerful tool to unmask abnormal autonomic reactivity. Vagal impairment or sympathetic overcompensation during respiratory stress may critically alter cardiorespiratory homeostasis. We therefore aimed to characterize VNA responses to hypercapnic challenge as an index of autonomic integrity, while also assessing vigilance-state modulation. Freely moving healthy rats (n = 9); 4.5 months GAERS (n = 7) and 11.5 months GAERS (n = 7) were implanted with epidural EEG electrodes and intraneural/control vagus nerve electrodes under sevoflurane anesthesia. After 24 h of continuous baseline recordings, animals underwent a 3-h protocol including baseline, 10% CO₂ exposure, and recovery. VNA was analyzed using compound action potential (CAP) detection based on local maxima thresholding, with neural-specific events isolated by excluding signals shared with control electrodes.
Hypercapnia significantly increased VNA in GAERS rats, whereas in NEC VNA remained unchanged during CO₂ exposure and showed a pronounced rebound during recovery, a response absent in epileptic animals, indicating altered autonomic responsiveness to respiratory stress. CAP density was higher during NREM sleep than during active wakefulness in healthy rats, consistent with circadian parasympathetic modulation.
Altered vagal responses to hypercapnic challenge reveal autonomic dysfunction in epilepsy, supporting vagus nerve activity as a promising biomarker for respiratory stress sensitivity and SUDEP-related mechanisms.

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