Corner Michael A, Schenck Carlos H
Netherlands Institute for Brain Research, Amsterdam, The Netherlands.
Minnesota Regional Sleep Disorders Center, Hennepin County Medical Center and University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, Minnesota, 55415, USA.
Neurosci Bull. 2015 Dec;31(6):649-62. doi: 10.1007/s12264-015-1557-1. Epub 2015 Aug 29.
An overview is presented of the literature dealing with sleep-like motility and concomitant neuronal activity patterns throughout the life cycle in vertebrates, ectothermic as well as endothermic. Spontaneous, periodically modulated, neurogenic bursts of non-purposive movements are a universal feature of larval and prenatal behavior, which in endothermic animals (i.e. birds and mammals) continue to occur periodically throughout life. Since the entire body musculature is involved in ever-shifting combinations, it is proposed that these spontaneously active periods be designated as 'rapid-BODY-movement' (RBM) sleep. The term 'rapid-EYE-movement (REM) sleep', characterized by attenuated muscle contractions and reduced tonus, can then be reserved for sleep at later stages of development. Mature stages of development in which sustained muscle atonia is combined with 'paradoxical arousal' of cortical neuronal firing patterns indisputably represent the evolutionarily most recent aspect of REM sleep, but more research with ectothermic vertebrates, such as fish, amphibians and reptiles, is needed before it can be concluded (as many prematurely have) that RBM is absent in these species. Evidence suggests a link between RBM sleep in early development and the clinical condition known as 'REM sleep behavior disorder (RBD)', which is characterized by the resurgence of periodic bouts of quasi-fetal motility that closely resemble RBM sleep. Early developmental neuromotor risk factors for RBD in humans also point to a relationship between RBM sleep and RBD.
本文综述了有关脊椎动物(包括变温动物和恒温动物)整个生命周期中类似睡眠的运动及伴随的神经元活动模式的文献。自发的、周期性调制的、非目的性运动的神经源性爆发是幼虫和产前行为的普遍特征,在恒温动物(即鸟类和哺乳动物)中,这种现象在整个生命过程中持续周期性出现。由于全身肌肉组织以不断变化的组合方式参与其中,因此建议将这些自发活跃期称为“快速身体运动”(RBM)睡眠。而以肌肉收缩减弱和紧张度降低为特征的“快速眼动(REM)睡眠”这一术语,则可保留用于发育后期的睡眠。发育成熟阶段中,持续的肌肉弛缓与皮质神经元放电模式的“反常觉醒”相结合,无疑代表了REM睡眠在进化上最新的方面,但在得出结论(许多人过早得出此结论)认为变温脊椎动物(如鱼类、两栖动物和爬行动物)不存在RBM之前,还需要对它们进行更多研究。有证据表明,早期发育中的RBM睡眠与被称为“快速眼动睡眠行为障碍(RBD)”的临床病症之间存在联系,该病症的特征是周期性出现类似胎儿运动的发作,与RBM睡眠极为相似。人类RBD的早期发育神经运动危险因素也表明RBM睡眠与RBD之间存在关联。