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Functional Study of Inhibitory Neurotransmission in the Human Epileptic Brain.
Sponsor: Neuromed IRCCS
Summary
Epilepsy is a neurological condition that afflicts 1% of the world population. 30% of patients become drug-resistant to classic antiepileptic treatment and only a small percentage, 5%, can undergo a neurosurgical resection of epileptic focus and recover almost completely from symptoms. To date, an imbalance between inhibitory and excitatory neurotransmission has been well accepted as the main root cause of epilepsy. A better understanding of the molecular mechanisms of this can lead to developing new therapeutic strategies. The investigators of the project want to describe the functional alteration of GABA- A receptor, the main actor of inhibitory neurotransmission in the central nervous system and characterize its subunit composition in the epileptic foci of patients with temporal lobe epilepsy. The authors, also, want to modulate, by means of selective neuroactive molecules, the function of this receptor to increase the inhibitory tone in the epileptic brain.
Official title: Functional Study of Inhibitory and Excitatory Neurotransmission in the Nervous Tissue Resected From Human Brain: Understanding New Molecular Mechanisms and Discovering New Therapeutic Targets to Cure Drug-resistant Epilepsy.
Key Details
Gender
All
Age Range
Any - Any
Study Type
OBSERVATIONAL
Enrollment
60
Start Date
2022-07-29
Completion Date
2027-07-31
Last Updated
2022-08-02
Healthy Volunteers
No
Conditions
Interventions
ex-vivo study
ex-vivo experiments in tissue slices obtained from biopsies
Locations (1)
IRCCS INM Neuromed
Pozzilli, Isernia, Italy