Department of Psychology, Sapienza University of Rome, 00185 Rome, Italy.
Neural Plast. 2013;2013:103949. doi: 10.1155/2013/103949. Epub 2013 Jun 11.
There is a general consensus that sleep is strictly linked to memory, learning, and, in general, to the mechanisms of neural plasticity, and that this link may directly affect recovery processes. In fact, a coherent pattern of empirical findings points to beneficial effect of sleep on learning and plastic processes, and changes in synaptic plasticity during wakefulness induce coherent modifications in EEG slow wave cortical topography during subsequent sleep. However, the specific nature of the relation between sleep and synaptic plasticity is not clear yet. We reported findings in line with two models conflicting with respect to the underlying mechanisms, that is, the "synaptic homeostasis hypothesis" and the "consolidation" hypothesis, and some recent results that may reconcile them. Independently from the specific mechanisms involved, sleep loss is associated with detrimental effects on plastic processes at a molecular and electrophysiological level. Finally, we reviewed growing evidence supporting the notion that plasticity-dependent recovery could be improved managing sleep quality, while monitoring EEG during sleep may help to explain how specific rehabilitative paradigms work. We conclude that a better understanding of the sleep-plasticity link could be crucial from a rehabilitative point of view.
人们普遍认为,睡眠与记忆、学习以及一般的神经可塑性机制密切相关,这种联系可能直接影响恢复过程。事实上,一系列一致的经验发现表明,睡眠对学习和可塑性过程有有益的影响,并且在清醒期间突触可塑性的变化会导致随后睡眠期间 EEG 慢波皮质地形图的相干变化。然而,睡眠和突触可塑性之间的具体关系尚不清楚。我们报告的研究结果与两种模型一致,这两种模型在潜在机制上存在冲突,即“突触稳态假说”和“巩固假说”,以及一些可能使它们协调一致的最新结果。无论涉及的具体机制如何,睡眠不足都会对分子和电生理水平上的可塑性过程产生不利影响。最后,我们综述了越来越多的证据支持这样一种观点,即通过管理睡眠质量可以改善依赖于可塑性的恢复,而在睡眠期间监测 EEG 可能有助于解释特定康复模式的工作原理。我们得出结论,从康复的角度来看,更好地理解睡眠-可塑性联系可能至关重要。