Generation of physiological and pathological high frequency oscillations: the role
of perisomatic inhibition in sharp-wave ripple and interictal spike generation.
Sharp-wave-ripple complexes (SWRs) and interictal-spikes are physiological and pathological
forms of irregularly occurring transient high activity events in the hippocampal EEG.
They share similar features and carry high-frequency oscillations with different spectral
features. Recent results reveal similarities and differences in the generation of
the two types of transients, and argue that parvalbumin containing basket cells (PVBCs)
are crucial in synchronizing neuronal activity in both cases. SWRs are generated in
the reciprocally connected network of inhibitory PVBCs, while in the pathological
case, synchronous failure of perisomatic inhibition triggers massive pyramidal cell
burst firing. While physiological ripple oscillation is primarily the result of phasic
perisomatic inhibitory currents, pathological high-frequency ripples are population
spikes of partially synchronous, massively bursting, uninhibited pyramidal cells.