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Epilepsy. By Gabrielle Cramer. Brain Scan of an Individual with Frontal Lobe Epilepsy. Epilepsy is a term used to define the unprovoked & spontaneous reoccurance of seizures which inhibit nervous system activity 180,000 Americans are diagnosed with Epilepsy each year. Neuron.
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Epilepsy By Gabrielle Cramer
Epilepsy is a term used to define the unprovoked & spontaneous reoccurance of seizures which inhibit nervous system activity • 180,000 Americans are diagnosed with Epilepsy each year
Neuronal Sodium Channel • The Neuronal Sodium Channel creates an action potential • There are inhibitory neurotransmitters such as GABA & excitatory neurons such as dopamine which stimulate activity in the brain
Factors determining Hyperexcitability • Cell membrane properties & the microenvironment of the neuron • Intracellular processes • Structural features of neuronal elements • Interneuron connection
Recent Studies • Scott ( 2001) utiliized Bang Sensitive Drosophila as amodel organismm for the study of genetic influence on Epilepsy Fig 1. Brain sections of normal Drosophila (top) and a mutant (bottom) that exhibits neurodegeneration indicated by the presence of vacuolar pathology throughout the brain • Use of Drosophila as a model organism when studying excitatory neurotransmitter and potassium ions (Shak, 2003)
Work Cited 1.The National Society for Epilepsy (2009), What is Epilepsy?. Available from Accessed on 15 February 2009). 2.^Cascino GD (1994). "Epilepsy: contemporary perspectives on evaluation and treatment". Mayo Clinic Proc69: 1199�1211.3.^ Engel J Jr (1996). "Surgery for seizures". NEJM334: 647-652. 3."Proposal for revised clinical and electroencephalographic classification of epileptic seizures. From the Commission on Classification and Terminology of the International League Against Epilepsy". Epilepsia22 (4): 489�501. 1981. 4."Proposal for revised classification of epilepsies and epileptic syndromes. Commission on Classification and Terminology of the International League Against Epilepsy". Epilepsia30 (4): 389�99. 1989. 6ILAE. Retrieved on 2006-07-18.7.Erucht MM, Quigg M, Schwaner C, Fountain NB. (2000). "Distribution of seizure precipitants among epilepsy syndromes.". Epilepsia41 (12): 1534�1539.. 5.Herzog AG, Harden CL, Liporace J, Pennell P, Schomer DL, Sperling M, et al. (2004). "Frequency of catamenial seizure exacerbation in women with localization-related epilepsy". Annals Neurology56 (3): 431-34. 6. Hirtz D, Thurman DJ, Gwinn-Hardy K, Mohamed M, Chaudhuri AR, Zalutsky R (2007-01-30). "How common are the 'common' neurologic disorders?". Neurology68 (5): 326�37. 7. Sander JW (2003). "The epidemiology of epilepsy revisited". Curr Opin Neurol16 (2): 165�70.