Sex Differences in Organophosphate Model of Benzodiazepine-Refractory Status Epilepticus and Neuronal Damage. Academic Article uri icon

abstract

  • Sex differences are common in human epilepsy. Although men are more susceptible to seizure than women, the mechanisms underlying sex-specific vulnerabilities to seizure are unclear. The organophosphate (OP), diisopropylfluorophosphate (DFP), is known to cause neurotoxicity and status epilepticus (SE), a serious neurologic condition that causes prolonged seizures and brain damage. Current therapies for OP poisoning and SE do not consider neuronal variations between male and female brains. Therefore, we investigated sex-dependent differences in electrographic seizure activity and neuronal injury using the DFP model of refractory SE in rats. EEG recordings were used to monitor DFP-induced SE, and the extent of brain injury was determined using fluoro-jade-B staining to detect cellular necrosis. After DFP exposure, we observed striking sex-dependent differences in SE and seizure activity patterns as well as protective responses to midazolam treatment. Following acute DFP exposure, male animals displayed more severe SE with intense epileptiform spiking and greater mortality than females. In contrast, we observed significantly more injured cells and cellular necrosis in the hippocampus and other brain regions in females than in males. We also observed extensive neuronal injury in the somatosensory cortex of males. The anticonvulsant effect of midazolam against SE was limited and found to be similar in males and females. However, unlike males, females exhibited substantially more protection against neuronal damage after midazolam treatment. Overall, these results demonstrate significant sex-dependent differences in DFP-induced refractory SE and neuronal damage, suggesting that it may be possible to develop sex-specific neuroprotective strategies for OP intoxication and refractory SE. Significance Statement Sex-dependent differences in neurotoxicity and SE are key biological variables after OP exposure. Here, we investigated sex-dependent differences in SE and brain injury after acute DFP exposure. Male rats had more severe SE and less survival than females, while females had more neuronal damage. Females had more neuroprotection to midazolam than males, while both sexes had similar but partial anticonvulsant effects. These findings suggest that a sex-specific therapeutic approach may prevent neurological complications of OP-induced SE.

published proceedings

  • J Pharmacol Exp Ther

author list (cited authors)

  • Singh, T., Ramakrishnan, S., Wu, X., & Reddy, D. S.

citation count

  • 4

complete list of authors

  • Singh, Tanveer||Ramakrishnan, Sreevidhya||Wu, Xin||Reddy, Doodipala Samba

publication date

  • September 2023