Danish Center for Sleep Medicine, Department of Clinical Neurophysiology, Center for Healthy Aging, Faculty of Health Sciences, University of Copenhagen, Glostrup Hospital, Copenhagen, Denmark.
Sleep. 2013 Aug 1;36(8):1173-7. doi: 10.5665/sleep.2880.
Narcolepsy is characterized by instability of sleep-wake, tonus, and rapid eye movement (REM) sleep regulation. It is associated with severe hypothalamic hypocretin deficiency, especially in patients with cataplexy (loss of tonus). As the hypocretin neurons coordinate and stabilize the brain's sleep-wake pattern, tonus, and REM flip-flop neuronal centers in animal models, we set out to determine whether hypocretin deficiency and/or cataplexy predicts the unstable sleep-wake and REM sleep pattern of the human phenotype.
We measured the frequency of transitions in patients with narcolepsy between sleep-wake states and to/from REM and NREM sleep stages. Patients were subdivided by the presence of +/- cataplexy and +/- hypocretin-1 deficiency.
Sleep laboratory studies conducted from 2001-2011.
In total 63 narcolepsy patients were included in the study. Cataplexy was present in 43 of 63 patients and hypocretin-1 deficiency was present in 37 of 57 patients.
Hypocretin-deficient patients with narcolepsy had a significantly higher frequency of sleep-wake transitions (P = 0.014) and of transitions to/from REM sleep (P = 0.044) than patients with normal levels of hypocretin-1. Patients with cataplexy had a significantly higher frequency of sleep-wake transitions (P = 0.002) than those without cataplexy. A multivariate analysis showed that transitions to/from REM sleep were predicted mainly by hypocretin-1 deficiency (P = 0.011), whereas sleep-wake transitions were predicted mainly by cataplexy (P = 0.001).
In human narcolepsy, hypocretin deficiency and cataplexy are both associated with signs of destabilized sleep-wake and REM sleep control, indicating that the disorder may serve as a human model for the sleep-wake and REM sleep flip-flop switches.
发作性睡病的特征是睡眠-觉醒、张力和快速眼动(REM)睡眠调节不稳定。它与严重的下丘脑食欲素缺乏有关,尤其是在伴有猝倒(张力丧失)的患者中。由于食欲素神经元在动物模型中协调和稳定大脑的睡眠-觉醒模式、张力和 REM 反转神经元中心,我们着手确定食欲素缺乏和/或猝倒是否预测人类表型的不稳定睡眠-觉醒和 REM 睡眠模式。
我们测量了发作性睡病患者在睡眠-觉醒状态之间以及从 REM 和非 REM 睡眠阶段之间转换的频率。根据是否存在 +/-猝倒和 +/-食欲素-1 缺乏,将患者分为亚组。
从 2001 年至 2011 年进行的睡眠实验室研究。
共有 63 名发作性睡病患者纳入研究。43 名患者存在猝倒,37 名患者存在食欲素-1 缺乏。
发作性睡病伴食欲素缺乏的患者睡眠-觉醒转换的频率明显更高(P = 0.014),从 REM 睡眠到非 REM 睡眠的转换频率也更高(P = 0.044),而食欲素-1 水平正常的患者则不然。有猝倒的患者睡眠-觉醒转换的频率明显更高(P = 0.002),而没有猝倒的患者则不然。多变量分析表明,从 REM 睡眠到非 REM 睡眠的转换主要由食欲素-1 缺乏预测(P = 0.011),而睡眠-觉醒转换主要由猝倒预测(P = 0.001)。
在人类发作性睡病中,食欲素缺乏和猝倒均与睡眠-觉醒和 REM 睡眠控制不稳定的迹象相关,表明该疾病可能作为睡眠-觉醒和 REM 睡眠反转开关的人类模型。