Villablanca Jaime R
Department of Psychiatry and Biobehavioral Sciences, Mental Retardation Research Center and Department of Neurobiology, Brain Research Institute, University of California, Los Angeles, CA 90024-1759, USA.
J Sleep Res. 2004 Sep;13(3):179-208. doi: 10.1111/j.1365-2869.2004.00412.x.
This paper reviews the lifetime contributions of the author to the field of sleep-wakefulness (S-W), reinterprets results of the early studies, and suggests new conclusions and perspectives. Long-term cats with mesencephalic transection show behavioral/polygraphic rapid eye movement sleep (REMS), including the typical oculo-pupillary behavior, even when the section is performed in kittens prior to S-W maturation. REMS can be induced as a reflex. Typical non-rapid eye movement S (NREMS) is absent and full W/arousal is present only after a precollicular section. The isolated forebrain (IF) rostral to the transection exhibits all features of W/arousal and NREMS [with electroencephalographic (EEG) spindles and delta waves], arousal to olfactory stimuli, and including the appropriate oculo-pupillary behaviors. These features also mature normally after neonatal transection. REMS is absent from the IF. After deprivation there is NREMS pressure and rebound in the IF, but the decerebrate cat only shows pressure for REMS. Most IF reactions to pharmacologic agents are within expectations, except for the tolerance/withdrawal effects of long-term morphine use which are absent. In contrast, these effects are supported by the brainstem (i.e. seen in the decerebrate cat). In cats with ablation of the telencephalon, or diencephalic cats, delta waves are absent in the thalamus. EEG thalamic spindle waves are seen triggering S for only 4-5 days after ablation. Therefore, true NREMS is absent in chronic diencephalic cats although pre- and postsomniac behaviors persist. These animals are hyperactive and show a pronounced, permanent insomnia; however, a low dose of barbiturate triggers a dramatic REMS/atypical NREMS rebound. Cats without the thalamus (athalamic cats), initially show a dissociation between behavioral hyperactivity/insomnia and the neocortical EEG, which for 15-20 days exhibits only delta and slower oscillations. Fast, low-voltage W rhythms appear later on, first during REMS, but spindle waves and S postures are absent from the start, such that these cats also display only atypical NREMS. Athalamic cats also show barbiturate-sensitive insomnia. Cats with ablation of the frontal cortices or the caudate nuclei remain permanently hyperactive. They also show a mild, but significant hyposomnia, which is permanent in afrontal cats, but lasts for about a month in acaudates. The polygraphic/behavioral features of their S-W states remain normal. We conclude and propose that: (a) the control of the S-W system is highly complex and distributed, but is organized hierarchically in a well-defined rostro-caudal manner; the rostral-most or highest level (telencephalon), is the most functionally complex/adaptative and regulates the lower levels; the diencephalic/basal forebrain, or middle level, has a pivotal role in inducing switching between S and W and in coordinating the lowest (brainstem) and highest levels; (b) W can occur independently in both the forebrain and brainstem, but true NREMS- and REMS-generating mechanisms exist exclusively in the forebrain and brainstem, respectively; (c) forebrain and brainstem S-W processes can operate independently from each other and are preprogrammed at birth; this helps understanding normal and abnormal polygraphic/behavioral dissociations in humans and normal dissociations/splitting in aquatic mammals; (d) NREMS homeostasis is present in the IF, but only REMS pressure after deprivation persists in the decerebrate cat; (e) the thalamus engages in both NREMS and W; (f) insomnia in diencephalic cats is the result of an imbalance between antagonistic W- and S-promoting cellular groups in the ventral brain (normally modulated by the telencephalon); (g) the EEG waves, which are signature for each S-W state, appear to truly drive the concomitant behaviors, e.g. a hypothetical human IF could alternate between behavioral NREMS and W/arousal/awareness; (h) a role for REMS is to keep the individual sleeping at the end of the self-limiting NREMS periods. The need for accelerating research on telencephaling NREMS periods. The need for accelerating research on telencephalic S-W processes and downstream control of the lower S-W system levels is emphasized.
本文回顾了作者对睡眠-觉醒(S-W)领域的毕生贡献,重新解读了早期研究结果,并提出了新的结论和观点。患有中脑横断的长期猫即使在S-W成熟前的小猫期进行横断,也会表现出行为/多导快速眼动睡眠(REMS),包括典型的眼-瞳孔行为。REMS可作为一种反射被诱导出来。典型的非快速眼动睡眠S(NREMS)不存在,只有在脑桥前横断后才会出现完全的清醒/觉醒。横断上方的孤立前脑(IF)表现出清醒/觉醒和NREMS的所有特征[伴有脑电图(EEG)纺锤波和δ波],对嗅觉刺激有觉醒反应,包括适当的眼-瞳孔行为。这些特征在新生期横断后也能正常成熟。IF中不存在REMS。剥夺后IF中有NREMS压力和反弹,但去大脑猫仅表现出对REMS的压力。IF对药物的大多数反应符合预期,但长期使用吗啡的耐受性/戒断效应不存在。相比之下,这些效应在脑干中得到证实(即在去大脑猫中可见)。在切除端脑的猫或间脑猫中,丘脑中不存在δ波。EEG丘脑纺锤波在切除后仅在4-5天内触发睡眠S。因此,慢性间脑猫中不存在真正的NREMS,尽管睡眠前和睡眠后的行为持续存在。这些动物活动亢进,表现出明显的、永久性的失眠;然而,低剂量的巴比妥酸盐会引发显著的REMS/非典型NREMS反弹。没有丘脑的猫(无丘脑猫)最初表现出行为亢进/失眠与新皮质EEG之间的分离,在15-20天内EEG仅表现出δ波和更慢的振荡。快速、低电压的清醒节律随后出现,首先出现在REMS期间,但从一开始就没有纺锤波和睡眠S姿势,因此这些猫也仅表现出非典型NREMS。无丘脑猫也表现出对巴比妥酸盐敏感的失眠。切除额叶皮质或尾状核的猫保持永久性活动亢进。它们还表现出轻度但显著的睡眠不足,在无额叶猫中是永久性的,但在无尾状核猫中持续约一个月。它们的S-W状态的多导/行为特征保持正常。我们得出结论并提出:(a)S-W系统的控制高度复杂且分布广泛,但以明确的头-尾方式分层组织;最前端或最高水平(端脑)功能最复杂/适应性最强,调节较低水平;间脑/基底前脑或中间水平在诱导S和W之间的转换以及协调最低(脑干)和最高水平方面起关键作用;(b)清醒可以在前脑和脑干中独立发生,但真正的NREMS和REMS产生机制分别仅存在于前脑和脑干中;(c)前脑和脑干的S-W过程可以相互独立运作,并且在出生时就已预先编程;这有助于理解人类正常和异常的多导/行为分离以及水生哺乳动物中的正常分离/分裂;(d)IF中存在NREMS稳态,但剥夺后只有去大脑猫中存在对REMS的压力;(e)丘脑参与NREMS和清醒;(f)间脑猫的失眠是腹侧脑内促进清醒和促进睡眠的拮抗细胞群之间失衡的结果(通常由端脑调节);(g)作为每个S-W状态特征的EEG波似乎真正驱动伴随的行为,例如,一个假设的人类IF可以在行为NREMS和清醒/觉醒/意识之间交替;(h)REMS的作用是在自我限制的NREMS期结束时让个体保持睡眠状态。强调了加速对端脑NREMS期研究的必要性。强调了加速对端脑S-W过程以及较低S-W系统水平的下游控制研究的必要性。