Mantua Janna, Mahan Keenan M, Henry Owen S, Spencer Rebecca M C
Neuroscience and Behavior Program, University of Massachusetts Amherst, MA, USA.
Commonwealth Honors College, University of Massachusetts Amherst, MA, USA.
Front Hum Neurosci. 2015 Jun 5;9:328. doi: 10.3389/fnhum.2015.00328. eCollection 2015.
Individuals with a history of traumatic brain injury (TBI) often report sleep disturbances, which may be caused by changes in sleep architecture or reduced sleep quality (greater time awake after sleep onset, poorer sleep efficiency, and sleep stage proportion alterations). Sleep is beneficial for memory formation, and herein we examine whether altered sleep physiology following TBI has deleterious effects on sleep-dependent declarative memory consolidation. Participants learned a list of word pairs in the morning or evening, and recall was assessed 12-h later, following an interval awake or with overnight sleep. Young adult participants (18-22 years) were assigned to one of four experimental groups: TBI Sleep (n = 14), TBI Wake (n = 12), non-TBI Sleep (n = 15), non-TBI Wake (n = 15). Each TBI participant was >1 year post-injury. Sleep physiology was measured with polysomnography. Memory consolidation was assessed by comparing change in word-pair recall over 12-h intersession intervals. The TBI group spent a significantly greater proportion of the night in SWS than the non-TBI group at the expense of NREM1. The TBI group also had marginally lower EEG delta power during SWS in the central region. Intersession changes in recall were greater for intervals with sleep than without sleep in both groups. However, despite abnormal sleep stage proportions for individuals with a TBI history, there was no difference in the intersession change in recall following sleep for the TBI and non-TBI groups. In both Sleep groups combined, there was a positive correlation between Intersession Change and the proportion of the night in NREM2 + SWS. Overall, sleep composition is altered following TBI but such deficits do not yield insufficiencies in sleep-dependent memory consolidation.
有创伤性脑损伤(TBI)病史的个体经常报告睡眠障碍,这可能是由睡眠结构变化或睡眠质量下降(睡眠开始后清醒时间更长、睡眠效率更低以及睡眠阶段比例改变)引起的。睡眠有利于记忆形成,在此我们研究TBI后睡眠生理改变是否对依赖睡眠的陈述性记忆巩固有有害影响。参与者在早晨或晚上学习一组单词对,并在间隔清醒12小时后或经过一夜睡眠后评估回忆情况。年轻成年参与者(18 - 22岁)被分配到四个实验组之一:TBI睡眠组(n = 14)、TBI清醒组(n = 12)、非TBI睡眠组(n = 15)、非TBI清醒组(n = 15)。每个TBI参与者受伤时间超过1年。用多导睡眠图测量睡眠生理。通过比较会话间隔12小时内单词对回忆的变化来评估记忆巩固情况。TBI组在慢波睡眠(SWS)中度过的夜间时间比例显著高于非TBI组,代价是NREM1睡眠减少。TBI组在SWS期间中央区域的脑电图δ波功率也略低。两组中,有睡眠间隔的回忆会话间变化都大于无睡眠间隔的情况。然而,尽管有TBI病史的个体睡眠阶段比例异常,但TBI组和非TBI组睡眠后回忆的会话间变化没有差异。在两个睡眠组合并的组中,会话间变化与NREM2 + SWS夜间比例之间存在正相关。总体而言,TBI后睡眠组成发生改变,但这些缺陷不会导致依赖睡眠的记忆巩固不足。