An experiment was conducted to evaluate the effect of 1-Hz or direct current brain stimulation on kindling behavior induced by 60-Hz sine wave stimulation. The effective threshold intensity to elicit a convulsion was determined on four separate occasions with 5 days of daily trials between determinations. On each day one group of experimental rats was stimulated with 1-Hz sine wave current before and after stimulation with 60-Hz sine wave current (1-60-1 group). Another group received direct current stimulation and 60-Hz current (D-60-D group). A third group received only 60-Hz stimulation. Suppression of kindling behavior usually induced by the 60-Hz stimulation occurred with 1-Hz stimulation; the mean threshold value increased on each successive determination. Suppression was most pronounced for the direct current group; it appeared after a single trial and persisted for 32 days after the last threshold determination. In contrast, most of the rats in the 1-60-1 group had recovered from the suppression after the 32 day period of nonstimulation. A second phase of the experiment indicated that the increase in threshold values for the D-60-D group occurred after a single DC stimulation. These results are consistent with the hypothesis generated by previous research that suppression following 1-Hz stimulation is not due to tissue damage. © 1981, Canadian Neurological Sciences Federation. All rights reserved.
CITATION STYLE
Gaito, J. (1981). The Effect of Low Frequency and Direct Current Stimulation on The Kindling Phenomenon in Rats. Canadian Journal of Neurological Sciences / Journal Canadien Des Sciences Neurologiques, 8(3), 249–253. https://doi.org/10.1017/S0317167100043286
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