Clemens Zsófia, Mölle Matthias, Eross Lóránd, Barsi Péter, Halász Péter, Born Jan
Department of Neurology, National Institute of Psychiatry and Neurology, Budapest, Hungary.
Brain. 2007 Nov;130(Pt 11):2868-78. doi: 10.1093/brain/awm146. Epub 2007 Jul 5.
Ripples are high-frequency oscillation bursts in the mammalian hippocampus mainly present during Non-REM sleep. In rodents they occur in association with sharp waves and are grouped by the cortical slow oscillation such that, in parallel with sleep spindles, ripple activity is suppressed during the hyperpolarized down-state and enhanced during the depolarized up-state. The temporal coupling between slow oscillations, spindles and ripples has been suggested to serve a hippocampo-neocortical dialogue underlying memory consolidation during sleep. Here, we examined whether a similar coupling exists between these oscillatory phenomena in humans. In sleep recordings from seven epileptic patients, scalp-recorded slow oscillations and spindles as well as parahippocampal ripples recorded from foramen ovale electrodes were identified by automatic algorithms. Additionally, ripple and spindle root mean square activity was determined for relevant frequency bands. Ripple density was higher during Non-REM than REM sleep (P < 0.001). Ripple activity distinctly decreased time-locked to slow oscillation negative half-waves in the three patients without temporal structural alterations (P < 0.001), whereas in the four patients with severe mesiotemporal structural alterations this coupling was obscure. Generally, in the patients ripple activity was increased before spindle peaks and distinctly decreased after the peak (P < 0.001). Ripples were consistently associated with interictal spikes suggesting that spike-ripple complexes represent an epileptic transformation of sharp wave-ripple complexes in the epileptic hippocampus. Our findings are consistent with the notion of a hippocampo-to-neocortical information transfer during sleep that is linked to coordinate ripple and spindle activity, and that in the intact temporal lobe is synchronized to cortical slow oscillations.
涟漪是哺乳动物海马体中的高频振荡爆发,主要出现在非快速眼动睡眠期间。在啮齿动物中,它们与尖波同时出现,并由皮层慢振荡分组,因此,与睡眠纺锤波一样,涟漪活动在超极化的下行状态下受到抑制,而在去极化的上行状态下增强。慢振荡、纺锤波和涟漪之间的时间耦合被认为有助于睡眠期间记忆巩固的海马体-新皮层对话。在这里,我们研究了人类这些振荡现象之间是否存在类似的耦合。在7名癫痫患者的睡眠记录中,通过自动算法识别头皮记录的慢振荡和纺锤波以及从卵圆孔电极记录的海马旁涟漪。此外,还确定了相关频段的涟漪和纺锤波均方根活动。非快速眼动睡眠期间的涟漪密度高于快速眼动睡眠(P < 0.001)。在三名没有颞叶结构改变的患者中,涟漪活动在慢振荡负半波的时间锁定时明显下降(P < 0.001),而在四名有严重内侧颞叶结构改变的患者中,这种耦合不明显。一般来说,在患者中,涟漪活动在纺锤波峰值之前增加,在峰值之后明显下降(P < 0.001)。涟漪始终与发作间期棘波相关,表明棘波-涟漪复合体代表癫痫海马体中尖波-涟漪复合体的癫痫转化。我们的研究结果与睡眠期间海马体到新皮层信息传递的概念一致,这种传递与协调涟漪和纺锤波活动有关,并且在完整的颞叶中与皮层慢振荡同步。