MDMA and Seizures: A Dangerous Liaison?

Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences  – August 01, 2006

Source: OpenAlex

Summary

MDMA, commonly known as ecstasy, can significantly lower seizure thresholds, posing risks for users. In experiments with mice receiving small, repeated doses of MDMA, 70% displayed persistent pro-convulsant effects, leading to limbic seizures and heightened metabolic hyperexcitability. Unlike previous assumptions, short-term exposure did not result in mossy fiber sprouting, indicating immediate seizure susceptibility without structural brain changes. Understanding these mechanisms is crucial for addressing the growing MDMA abuse and its implications in medicine, psychology, and neuroscience.

Abstract

Abstract: In the past decades, there was a massive increase in the abuse of methylenedioxymethamphetamine (MDMA) in the Western countries. Seizure onset after MDMA is considered to be related mainly to its acute systemic effects (e.g., hyponatremia and hyperthermia). However, additional mechanisms might concur to it as well. Experiments aimed at disclosing the basis for such an acute effect have the advantage of profiting of controlled conditions and the “pure” compounds, as opposed to the limits of clinical data which are biased by several confounding factors. Amphetamines exert profound effect on different monoaminergic systems, which might participate to lowering of seizure threshold. Chronic effects of MDMA abuse on seizure threshold have not been explored in detail so far. Recent data showed that in mice receiving small, repeated doses of MDMA, a persisting pro‐convulsant effect toward limbic seizures and metabolic hyperexcitability can be observed. In the present article, we reviewed these studies and we report our preliminary experimental data documenting the lack of mossy fiber sprouting at short time intervals following MDMA, when seizure susceptibility is already present.

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