Yaghouby Farid, Schildt Christopher J, Donohue Kevin D, O'Hara Bruce F, Sunderam Sridhar
Annu Int Conf IEEE Eng Med Biol Soc. 2014;2014:3771-4. doi: 10.1109/EMBC.2014.6944444.
Experimental manipulation of sleep in rodents is an important tool for analyzing the mechanisms of sleep and related disorders in humans. Sleep restriction systems have relied in the past on manual sensory stimulation and recently on more sophisticated automated means of delivering the same. The ability to monitor and track behavior through the electroencephalogram (EEG) and other modalities provides the opportunity to implement more selective sleep restriction that is targeted at particular stages of sleep with flexible control over their amount, duration, and timing. In this paper we characterize the performance of a novel tactile stimulation system operating in closed-loop to interrupt rapid eye movement (REM) sleep in mice when it is detected in real time from the EEG. Acute experiments in four wild-type mice over six hours showed that a reduction of over 50% of REM sleep was feasible without affecting non-REM (NREM) sleep. The animals remained responsive to the stimulus over the six hour duration of the experiment.
对啮齿动物的睡眠进行实验性操控是分析人类睡眠及相关障碍机制的重要工具。过去,睡眠限制系统依赖手动感官刺激,近来则依靠更复杂的自动化手段来实现同样的刺激。通过脑电图(EEG)和其他方式监测和追踪行为的能力,为实施更具选择性的睡眠限制提供了机会,这种限制针对特定睡眠阶段,可灵活控制其数量、持续时间和时间安排。在本文中,我们描述了一种新型触觉刺激系统的性能,该系统在闭环状态下运行,当从脑电图实时检测到小鼠快速眼动(REM)睡眠时,会打断这种睡眠。对四只野生型小鼠进行的长达六小时的急性实验表明,在不影响非快速眼动(NREM)睡眠的情况下,将快速眼动睡眠减少50%以上是可行的。在实验的六个小时期间,动物对刺激保持反应能力。