Addressing Analysis Questions for a Nonlinear Synaptic System as a Model for Ictogenesis
Abstract number :
1.060
Submission category :
1. Basic Mechanisms / 1E. Models
Year :
2018
Submission ID :
500499
Source :
www.aesnet.org
Presentation date :
12/1/2018 6:00:00 PM
Published date :
Nov 5, 2018, 18:00 PM
Authors :
Sofia Karamintziou, Harvard Medical School, Massachusetts General Hospital and Kevin Staley, Harvard Medical School, Massachusetts General Hospital
Rationale: We seek to understand and control the conditions that lead to seizure initiation by performing an analysis within a system-theoretical framework, which is steered by observations in an experimental model of chronic epilepsy. Methods: We simulate the hippocampal CA3 region as a network of integrate-and-fire neurons with an anatomical synaptic topology that is modulated by use-dependent synaptic depression and recovery. The network exhibits high-dimensional, third-order nonlinear dynamics. The cornerstone of the modeling approach is short-term synaptic plasticity, that is, the modification in transmitter release probability, a process demonstrated experimentally to exhibit first-order depression and recovery kinetics. This type of synaptic plasticity may also underlie elements of activity-dependent disinhibition arising from depression of excitatory glutamatergic inputs to interneurons. Results: Preliminary results are presented with respect to parameters that are within experimentally described ranges and that generate both stable interictal network activity and occasional ictal transitions. Conclusions: Keeping pace with experimental observations, this work exploits the rigor of dynamical systems theory towards unraveling the mechanisms of seizure onset. Funding: NIH