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SeminarPast EventNeuroscience

Epileptogenesis in the developing brain:understanding a moving target

Tallie Z Baram

Prof

University of California-Irvine

Schedule
Wednesday, April 6, 2022

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Schedule

Wednesday, April 6, 2022

4:00 PM Europe/London

Host: Clinical and Experimental Epilepsy

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Event Information

Domain

Neuroscience

Original Event

View source

Host

Clinical and Experimental Epilepsy

Duration

70 minutes

Abstract

The origins, mechanisms and consequences of epilepsy in the developing brain are incompletely understood. Many developmental epilepsies have a genetic basis and their mechanisms stem from deficits in the function of one or numerous genes. Others, such as those that follow prolonged febrile seizures or severe birth asphyxia in a ‘normal’ brain may depend on the interaction of the insult with the rapidly evolving brain cells and circuits. Yet, how early-life insults may provoke epilepsy is unclear, and requires multiple levels of analysis: behavior, circuits, cells [neurons, glia] and molecules. Here we discuss developmental epileptogenesis, addressing some of its special features: the epilepsy phenotype, the effects insults on the maturation of brain circuits, the role of neuron-glia-neuron communication in cellular and circuit refinement, and how transient epileptogenic insults provoke enduring changes in the structure, connectivity and function of salient neuronal populations. We will highlight resolved questions- and the many unresolved issues that require tackling in 2022 and beyond.

Topics

brain circuitscellular refinementdevelopmentdevelopmental epilepsyearly-life insultsepilepsyepileptogenesisfebrile seizuresgenetic basisneuron-glia communicationneuronal populations

About the Speaker

Tallie Z Baram

Prof

University of California-Irvine

Contact & Resources

Personal Website

faculty.sites.uci.edu/baramlab/

@z_baram

Follow on Twitter/X

twitter.com/z_baram

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