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      Anticonvulsants for soman-induced seizure activity.

      Journal of Biomedical Science
      Animals, Anticonvulsants, classification, therapeutic use, Atropine, Convulsants, toxicity, Diazepam, Disease Models, Animal, Male, Rats, Rats, Sprague-Dawley, Seizures, chemically induced, drug therapy, physiopathology, Soman

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          Abstract

          This report describes studies of anticonvulsants for the organophosphorus (OP) nerve agent soman: a basic research effort to understand how different pharmacological classes of compounds influence the expression of seizure produced by soman in rats, and a drug screening effort to determine whether clinically useful antiepileptics can modulate soman-induced seizures in rats. Electroencephalographic (EEG) recordings were used in these studies. Basic studies were conducted in rats pretreated with HI-6 and challenged with 1.6 x LD50 soman. Antimuscarinic compounds were extremely effective in blocking (pretreatment) or terminating soman seizures when given 5 min after seizure onset. However, significantly higher doses were required when treatment was delayed for more than 10 min, and some antimuscarinic compounds lost anticonvulsant efficacy when treatment was delayed for more than 40 min. Diazepam blocked seizure onset, yet seizures could recur after an initial period of anticonvulsant effect at doses

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