Rosinvil T, Lafortune M, Sekerovic Z, Bouchard M, Dubé J, Latulipe-Loiselle A, Martin N, Lina J M, Carrier J
Center for Advanced Research in Sleep Medicine, Hôpital du Sacré-Coeur de Montréal Montréal, QC, Canada ; Department of Psychology, Université de Montréal Montréal, QC, Canada ; Research Center, Institut Universitaire Gériatrique de Montréal Montréal, QC, Canada.
Department of Psychology, Université de Montréal Montréal, QC, Canada.
Front Hum Neurosci. 2015 Jun 3;9:323. doi: 10.3389/fnhum.2015.00323. eCollection 2015.
The mechanisms underlying sleep spindles (~11-15 Hz; >0.5 s) help to protect sleep. With age, it becomes increasingly difficult to maintain sleep at a challenging time (e.g., daytime), even after sleep loss. This study compared spindle characteristics during daytime recovery and nocturnal sleep in young and middle-aged adults. In addition, we explored whether spindles characteristics in baseline nocturnal sleep were associated with the ability to maintain sleep during daytime recovery periods in both age groups.
Twenty-nine young (15 women and 14 men; 27.3 y ± 5.0) and 31 middle-aged (19 women and 13 men; 51.6 y ± 5.1) healthy subjects participated in a baseline nocturnal sleep and a daytime recovery sleep after 25 hours of sleep deprivation. Spindles were detected on artifact-free Non-rapid eye movement (NREM) sleep epochs. Spindle density (nb/min), amplitude (μV), frequency (Hz), and duration (s) were analyzed on parasagittal (linked-ears) derivations.
In young subjects, spindle frequency increased during daytime recovery sleep as compared to baseline nocturnal sleep in all derivations, whereas middle-aged subjects showed spindle frequency enhancement only in the prefrontal derivation. No other significant interaction between age group and sleep condition was observed. Spindle density for all derivations and centro-occipital spindle amplitude decreased whereas prefrontal spindle amplitude increased from baseline to daytime recovery sleep in both age groups. Finally, no significant correlation was found between spindle characteristics during baseline nocturnal sleep and the marked reduction in sleep efficiency during daytime recovery sleep in both young and middle-aged subjects.
These results suggest that the interaction between homeostatic and circadian pressure modulates spindle frequency differently in aging. Spindle characteristics do not seem to be linked with the ability to maintain daytime recovery sleep.
睡眠纺锤波(~11 - 15赫兹;>0.5秒)背后的机制有助于保护睡眠。随着年龄增长,即使在睡眠缺失后,在具有挑战性的时段(如白天)维持睡眠变得越来越困难。本研究比较了年轻和中年成年人白天恢复睡眠和夜间睡眠期间的纺锤波特征。此外,我们探讨了两个年龄组基线夜间睡眠中的纺锤波特征是否与白天恢复期间维持睡眠的能力相关。
29名年轻受试者(15名女性和14名男性;27.3岁±5.0)和31名中年受试者(19名女性和13名男性;51.6岁±5.1)参与了基线夜间睡眠和25小时睡眠剥夺后的白天恢复睡眠。在无伪迹的非快速眼动(NREM)睡眠时段检测纺锤波。在矢状旁(双耳连线)导联上分析纺锤波密度(个/分钟)、振幅(微伏)、频率(赫兹)和持续时间(秒)。
在年轻受试者中,与基线夜间睡眠相比,所有导联的白天恢复睡眠期间纺锤波频率均增加,而中年受试者仅在前额叶导联显示纺锤波频率增强。未观察到年龄组和睡眠状态之间的其他显著相互作用。两个年龄组从基线到白天恢复睡眠期间,所有导联的纺锤波密度和中央枕部纺锤波振幅均降低,而前额叶纺锤波振幅增加。最后,在年轻和中年受试者中,基线夜间睡眠期间的纺锤波特征与白天恢复睡眠期间睡眠效率的显著降低之间均未发现显著相关性。
这些结果表明,稳态压力和昼夜节律压力之间的相互作用在衰老过程中对纺锤波频率的调节方式不同。纺锤波特征似乎与维持白天恢复睡眠的能力无关。