The European journal of neuroscience
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Excitatory amino acid transmitters are involved in the initiation of seizures and their propagation. Most attention has been directed to synapses using N-methyl-D-aspartate (NMDA) receptors, although more recent evidence indicates potential roles for the alpha-amino-3-hydroxy-5-methyl-4-isoxazolepropionic acid (AMPA) receptors as well. ⋯ These effects of NBQX were dramatically increased by pretreatment with low doses of NMDA antagonists, whereas adverse effects of NBQX were not potentiated. These data suggest that both non-NMDA and NMDA receptors are critically involved in the kindled state, and that combinations of AMPA and NMDA receptor antagonists provide a new strategy for treatment of epileptic seizures.
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Using immunohistochemistry and in situ hybridization, we studied changes in expression of some neuropeptides in large and medium-sized neurons in lumbar 4 and 5 rat dorsal root ganglia projecting to the gracile nucleus, in response to peripheral axotomy. Fourteen days after unilateral sciatic nerve transection, many large neurons and some medium-sized neurons in ipsilateral dorsal root ganglia were strongly neuropeptide Y-positive. Galanin-, vasoactive intestinal polypeptide (VIP)- and peptide histidine-isoleucine (PHI)-like immunoreactivities coexisted with neuropeptide Y-like immunoreactivity in some of these neurons. ⋯ Neuropeptide Y-like immunoreactivity colocalized with galanin- or VIP/PHI-like immunoreactivity in some nerve fibres. None of these neuropeptide immunoreactivities could be detected in nerve fibres and terminals in the control or contralateral gracile nucleus. These findings suggest that neuropeptides, in addition to their role in small dorsal root ganglion neurons, may have a function in large and medium-sized dorsal root ganglion neurons projecting to laminae III and IV in the dorsal horn as well as to the gracile nuclei, as a part of their response to peripheral axotomy.