Khatami Ramin, Landolt Hans-Peter, Achermann Peter, Adam Martin, Rétey Julia V, Werth Esther, Schmid Dagmar, Bassetti Claudio L
Department of Neurology, University Hospital Zürich, Switzerland.
Sleep. 2008 Jun;31(6):859-67. doi: 10.1093/sleep/31.6.859.
We recently proposed insufficient non-rapid eye movement sleep (NREMS) intensity to contribute to disturbed nocturnal sleep in patients with narcolepsy-cataplexy (NC). To test this hypothesis, we investigated the effect of physiologically intensified NREMS in recovery sleep following sleep deprivation.
Nocturnal baseline and recovery sleep architecture, and the sleep electroencephalogram (EEG) before and after 40 hours of sustained wakefulness were compared between 6 drug-free patients with NC (age range: 19-37 years) and 6 individually matched, healthy control subjects (18-43 years).
Sleep and sleep EEG power spectra (C3A2 derivation). The dynamics of the homeostatic Process S were estimated from the time course of slow-wave activity (SWA, spectral power within 0.75-4.5 Hz) across consecutive NREMS episodes.
Sleep research laboratory.
In baseline, SWA decreased across consecutive NREMS episodes in patients with NC and control subjects. The build-up of SWA, however, was attenuated in NC in the second episode (P = 0.01) due to a higher number of short wake periods (P = 0.02). Prolonged wakefulness increased initial SWA in both groups (P = 0.003) and normalized the baseline differences between patients and control subjects in the time course of SWA in NREMS. The changed dynamics of SWA in the patients in recovery sleep when compared with baseline were associated with reduced numbers of intermittent wake periods in the first (P = 0.01) and second (P = 0.04) NREMS episodes. All patients, but no control subjects, showed a sleep-onset rapid eye movement period (SOREMP) in both baseline and recovery sleep. Sleep deprivation increased SOREMP duration (P = 0.03).
Increased SWA after sleep deprivation indicates that sleep homeostasis is functional in NC. Increased NREMS intensity in recovery sleep postpones sleep fragmentation, supporting our concept that sleep fragmentation is directly related to insufficient NREMS intensity in NC. The persistence of SOREMP despite enhanced NREMS pressure suggests an abnormal interaction between NREMS and REMS regulatory processes.
我们最近提出,非快速眼动睡眠(NREMS)强度不足会导致发作性睡病伴猝倒(NC)患者夜间睡眠紊乱。为验证这一假设,我们研究了睡眠剥夺后恢复睡眠中生理性增强的NREMS的作用。
比较了6例未用药的NC患者(年龄范围:19 - 37岁)和6例个体匹配的健康对照者(18 - 43岁)的夜间基线睡眠和恢复睡眠结构,以及持续清醒40小时前后的睡眠脑电图(EEG)。
睡眠和睡眠EEG功率谱(C3A2导联)。根据连续NREMS发作期间慢波活动(SWA,0.75 - 4.5 Hz范围内的频谱功率)的时间进程估算内稳态过程S的动态变化。
睡眠研究实验室。
在基线时,NC患者和对照者的连续NREMS发作期间SWA均下降。然而,由于短觉醒期数量较多(P = 0.02),NC患者在第二个发作期SWA的累积减弱(P = 0.01)。延长觉醒时间使两组的初始SWA均增加(P = 0.003),并使患者和对照者在NREMS中SWA时间进程的基线差异正常化。与基线相比,患者恢复睡眠时SWA动态变化的改变与第一个(P = 0.01)和第二个(P = 0.04)NREMS发作期间间歇性觉醒期数量减少有关。所有患者在基线和恢复睡眠时均出现睡眠始发快速眼动期(SOREMP),但对照者均未出现。睡眠剥夺增加了SOREMP持续时间(P = 0.03)。
睡眠剥夺后SWA增加表明NC患者的睡眠内稳态功能正常。恢复睡眠中NREMS强度增加可推迟睡眠片段化,支持我们的观点,即睡眠片段化与NC患者NREMS强度不足直接相关。尽管NREMS压力增强,但SOREMP持续存在,提示NREMS和REMS调节过程之间存在异常相互作用。