Picchioni Dante, Pixa Morgan L, Fukunaga Masaki, Carr Walter S, Horovitz Silvina G, Braun Allen R, Duyn Jeff H
Behavioral Biology Branch, Walter Reed Army Institute of Research, Silver Spring, MD.
Behavioral Biology Branch, Walter Reed Army Institute of Research, Silver Spring, MD ; Computer Systems Laboratory, Thomas Jefferson High School for Science and Technology, Alexandria, VA.
Sleep. 2014 Feb 1;37(2):387-97. doi: 10.5665/sleep.3422.
To determine whether thalamocortical signaling between the thalamus and the neocortex decreases from wakefulness to nonrapid eye movement (NREM) sleep.
Electroencephalography and functional magnetic resonance imaging data were collected simultaneously at 02:30 after 44 h of sleep deprivation.
Clinical research hospital.
There were six volunteers (mean age 24.2 y, one male) who yielded sufficient amounts of usable, artifact-free data. All were healthy, right-handed native English speakers who consumed less than 710 mL of caffeinated beverages per day. Psychiatric, neurological, circadian, and sleep disorders were ruled out by reviewing each patient's clinical history. A standard clinical nocturnal polysomnogram was negative for sleep disorders.
N/A.
A functional connectivity analysis was performed using the centromedian nucleus as the seed region. We determined the statistical significance of the difference between correlations obtained during wakefulness and during slow wave sleep. Neocortical regions displaying decreased thalamic connectivity were all heteromodal regions (e.g., medial frontal gyrus and posterior cingulate/precuneus), whereas there was a complete absence of neocortical regions displaying increased thalamic connectivity. Although more clusters of significant decreases were observed in stage 2 sleep, these results were similar to the results for slow wave sleep.
Results of this study provide evidence of a functional deafferentation of the neocortex during nonrapid eye movement (NREM) sleep in humans. This deafferentation likely accounts for increased sensory awareness thresholds during NREM sleep. Decreased thalamocortical connectivity in regions such as the posterior cingulate/precuneus also are observed in coma and general anesthesia, suggesting that changes in thalamocortical connectivity may act as a universal "control switch" for changes in consciousness that are observed in coma, general anesthesia, and natural sleep.
确定丘脑与新皮层之间的丘脑皮质信号从清醒状态到非快速眼动(NREM)睡眠是否会减弱。
在睡眠剥夺44小时后的02:30同时收集脑电图和功能磁共振成像数据。
临床研究医院。
有六名志愿者(平均年龄24.2岁,一名男性)提供了足够数量的可用、无伪迹数据。所有志愿者均健康,以英语为母语且惯用右手,每天饮用含咖啡因饮料少于710毫升。通过查阅每位患者的临床病史排除了精神、神经、昼夜节律和睡眠障碍。标准临床夜间多导睡眠图显示无睡眠障碍。
无。
以中央中核为种子区域进行功能连接分析。我们确定了清醒期间和慢波睡眠期间获得的相关性之间差异的统计学显著性。显示丘脑连接性降低的新皮层区域均为异模态区域(如额内侧回和后扣带回/楔前叶),而完全没有显示丘脑连接性增加的新皮层区域。尽管在第二阶段睡眠中观察到更多显著降低的簇,但这些结果与慢波睡眠的结果相似。
本研究结果提供了人类非快速眼动(NREM)睡眠期间新皮层功能去传入的证据。这种去传入可能是NREM睡眠期间感觉意识阈值升高的原因。在昏迷和全身麻醉中也观察到后扣带回/楔前叶等区域的丘脑皮质连接性降低,这表明丘脑皮质连接性的变化可能是昏迷、全身麻醉和自然睡眠中观察到的意识变化的通用“控制开关”。