Lipinska Gosia, Timol Ridwana, Thomas Kevin G F
ACSENT Laboratory, Department of Psychology, University of Cape Town, South Africa.
ACSENT Laboratory, Department of Psychology, University of Cape Town, South Africa.
Med Hypotheses. 2015 Dec;85(6):914-21. doi: 10.1016/j.mehy.2015.09.010. Epub 2015 Sep 12.
Sleep is disrupted during active use of methamphetamine (MA), during withdrawal from the drug, and during abstinence from its use. However, relatively little is known about possible mediatory functions of disrupted sleep in the emergence, manifestation, and maintenance of cognitive and affective symptoms of MA abuse. We hypothesise that sleep functions as a mediator for stimulant drug effects. Specifically, we propose that objectively-measured sleep parameters can be used to explain some of the variability in the experience and presentation of memory deficits and emotion dysregulation in MA abusers. After describing how important healthy sleep is to unimpaired cognitive and affective functioning, we review literature describing how sleep is disrupted in MA abuse. Then, we provide a conceptual framework for our hypothesis by explaining the relationship between MA abuse, sleep disruption, memory deficits, emotion dysregulation, and changes in reward-related brain networks. We conclude by discussing implications of the hypothesis for research and treatment.
在积极使用甲基苯丙胺(MA)期间、药物戒断期间以及停用期间,睡眠都会受到干扰。然而,关于睡眠中断在MA滥用的认知和情感症状的出现、表现及维持过程中可能的中介作用,我们了解得相对较少。我们假设睡眠起到了兴奋剂药物作用的中介作用。具体而言,我们提出客观测量的睡眠参数可用于解释MA滥用者在记忆缺陷和情绪失调的体验及表现方面的一些变异性。在描述了健康睡眠对未受损的认知和情感功能的重要性之后,我们回顾了描述MA滥用中睡眠如何受到干扰的文献。然后,我们通过解释MA滥用、睡眠中断、记忆缺陷、情绪失调以及与奖励相关的脑网络变化之间的关系,为我们的假设提供了一个概念框架。我们通过讨论该假设对研究和治疗的意义来得出结论。