Hippocampal granule cell dispersion: a non-specific finding in pediatric patients with no history of seizures

Abstract Chronic epilepsy has been associated with hippocampal abnormalities like neuronal loss, gliosis and granule cell dispersion. The granule cell layer of a normal human hippocampal dentate gyrus is traditionally regarded as a compact neuron-dense layer. Histopathological studies of surgically...

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Main Authors: Achira Roy, Kathleen J. Millen, Raj P. Kapur
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2020-04-01
Series:Acta Neuropathologica Communications
Subjects:
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s40478-020-00928-3
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spelling doaj-59bf50a197f945b194e1c1f94f400a5a2020-11-25T02:34:37ZengBMCActa Neuropathologica Communications2051-59602020-04-018112010.1186/s40478-020-00928-3Hippocampal granule cell dispersion: a non-specific finding in pediatric patients with no history of seizuresAchira Roy0Kathleen J. Millen1Raj P. Kapur2Center for Integrative Brain Research, Seattle Children’s Research InstituteCenter for Integrative Brain Research, Seattle Children’s Research InstituteCenter for Integrative Brain Research, Seattle Children’s Research InstituteAbstract Chronic epilepsy has been associated with hippocampal abnormalities like neuronal loss, gliosis and granule cell dispersion. The granule cell layer of a normal human hippocampal dentate gyrus is traditionally regarded as a compact neuron-dense layer. Histopathological studies of surgically resected or autopsied hippocampal samples primarily from temporal lobe epilepsy patients, as well as animal models of epilepsy, describe variable patterns of granule cell dispersion including focal cell clusters, broader thick segments, and bilamination or “tram-tracking”. Although most studies have implicated granule cell dispersion as a specific feature of chronic epilepsy, very few “non-seizure” controls were included in these published investigations. Our retrospective survey of 147 cadaveric pediatric human hippocampi identified identical morphological spectra of granule cell dispersion in both normal and seizure-affected brains. Moreover, sections across the entire antero-posterior axis of a control cadaveric hippocampus revealed repetitive occurrence of different morphologies of the granule cell layer – compact, focally disaggregated and bilaminar. The results indicate that granule cell dispersion is within the spectrum of normal variation and not unique to patients with epilepsy. We speculate that sampling bias has been responsible for an erroneous dogma, which we hope to rectify with this investigation.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s40478-020-00928-3HippocampusGranule cell dispersionHumanEpilepsyDentate gyrusTemporal lobe epilepsy
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Achira Roy
Kathleen J. Millen
Raj P. Kapur
spellingShingle Achira Roy
Kathleen J. Millen
Raj P. Kapur
Hippocampal granule cell dispersion: a non-specific finding in pediatric patients with no history of seizures
Acta Neuropathologica Communications
Hippocampus
Granule cell dispersion
Human
Epilepsy
Dentate gyrus
Temporal lobe epilepsy
author_facet Achira Roy
Kathleen J. Millen
Raj P. Kapur
author_sort Achira Roy
title Hippocampal granule cell dispersion: a non-specific finding in pediatric patients with no history of seizures
title_short Hippocampal granule cell dispersion: a non-specific finding in pediatric patients with no history of seizures
title_full Hippocampal granule cell dispersion: a non-specific finding in pediatric patients with no history of seizures
title_fullStr Hippocampal granule cell dispersion: a non-specific finding in pediatric patients with no history of seizures
title_full_unstemmed Hippocampal granule cell dispersion: a non-specific finding in pediatric patients with no history of seizures
title_sort hippocampal granule cell dispersion: a non-specific finding in pediatric patients with no history of seizures
publisher BMC
series Acta Neuropathologica Communications
issn 2051-5960
publishDate 2020-04-01
description Abstract Chronic epilepsy has been associated with hippocampal abnormalities like neuronal loss, gliosis and granule cell dispersion. The granule cell layer of a normal human hippocampal dentate gyrus is traditionally regarded as a compact neuron-dense layer. Histopathological studies of surgically resected or autopsied hippocampal samples primarily from temporal lobe epilepsy patients, as well as animal models of epilepsy, describe variable patterns of granule cell dispersion including focal cell clusters, broader thick segments, and bilamination or “tram-tracking”. Although most studies have implicated granule cell dispersion as a specific feature of chronic epilepsy, very few “non-seizure” controls were included in these published investigations. Our retrospective survey of 147 cadaveric pediatric human hippocampi identified identical morphological spectra of granule cell dispersion in both normal and seizure-affected brains. Moreover, sections across the entire antero-posterior axis of a control cadaveric hippocampus revealed repetitive occurrence of different morphologies of the granule cell layer – compact, focally disaggregated and bilaminar. The results indicate that granule cell dispersion is within the spectrum of normal variation and not unique to patients with epilepsy. We speculate that sampling bias has been responsible for an erroneous dogma, which we hope to rectify with this investigation.
topic Hippocampus
Granule cell dispersion
Human
Epilepsy
Dentate gyrus
Temporal lobe epilepsy
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s40478-020-00928-3
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