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Full-Text Articles in Neuroscience and Neurobiology

Issues Related To Development Of New Antiseizure Treatments, Karen S. Wilcox, Tracy Dixon-Salazar, Graeme J. Sills, Elinor Ben-Menachem, H. Steve White, Roger J. Porter, Marc A. Dichter, Solomon L. Moshe, Jeffrey L. Noebels, Michael D. Privitera, Michael A. Rogawski Jul 2013

Issues Related To Development Of New Antiseizure Treatments, Karen S. Wilcox, Tracy Dixon-Salazar, Graeme J. Sills, Elinor Ben-Menachem, H. Steve White, Roger J. Porter, Marc A. Dichter, Solomon L. Moshe, Jeffrey L. Noebels, Michael D. Privitera, Michael A. Rogawski

Michael A. Rogawski

This report represents a summary of the discussions led by the antiseizure treatment working group of the International League Against Epilepsy (ILAE)/American Epilepsy Society (AES) Working Groups joint meeting in London (London Meeting). We review here what is currently known about the pharmacologic characteristics of current models of refractory seizures, both for adult and pediatric epilepsy. In addition, we address how the National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke (NINDS)-funded Anticonvulsant Screening Program (ASP) is evolving to incorporate appropriate animal models in the search for molecules that might be sufficiently novel to warrant further pharmacologic development. We also briefly address …


The Intrinsic Severity Hypothesis Of Pharmacoresistance To Antiepileptic Drugs, Michael Rogawski Dec 2012

The Intrinsic Severity Hypothesis Of Pharmacoresistance To Antiepileptic Drugs, Michael Rogawski

Michael A. Rogawski

Pharmacoresistance to antiepileptic drugs (AEDs) is a barrier to seizure freedom for many persons with epilepsy. For nearly two decades, pharmacoresistance has been framed in terms of factors affecting the access of AEDs to their molecular targets in the brain or the actions of the drugs on these targets. Shortcomings in this prevailing view led to the formulation of the intrinsic severity hypothesis of pharmacoresistance to AEDs, which is based on the recognition that there are neurobiologic factors that confer phenotypic variation among individuals with etiologically similar forms of epilepsy and postulates that more severe epilepsy is more difficult to …


Antiepileptic Drugs And Migraine, Michael Rogawski Apr 2008

Antiepileptic Drugs And Migraine, Michael Rogawski

Michael A. Rogawski

Prepared for the 16th International Headache Research Seminar, “Innovative Drug Development For Headache Disorders,” March 23–25, 2007, Copenhagen, Denmark.