Kobayashi Ihori, Lavela Joseph, Bell Kimberly, Mellman Thomas A
Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, Howard University College of Medicine, 520 W St. NW, Washington, DC 20059, USA.
Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, Howard University College of Medicine, 520 W St. NW, Washington, DC 20059, USA.
Physiol Behav. 2016 Oct 1;164(Pt A):11-8. doi: 10.1016/j.physbeh.2016.05.005. Epub 2016 May 8.
Posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) has been associated with sleep disturbances including alterations in sleep stages and recently, elevated nocturnal autonomic nervous system (ANS) arousal (i.e., dominance of the sympathetic nervous system over the parasympathetic nervous system). Data suggest that sleep contributes to the regulation of ANS activity. In our previous ambulatory heart rate variability (HRV) monitoring study, strong relationships between sleep and nocturnal ANS activity in resilient participants (i.e., individuals who had never had PTSD despite exposure to high-impact trauma) were not seen with PTSD. In this study, we examined the impact of PTSD vs. resilience on ANS activity as a function of sleep stage and time of sleep. Participants (age 18-35) with current PTSD (n=38) and resilience (n=33) completed two overnight polysomnography recordings in a lab setting. The second night electrocardiogram was analyzed for frequency domain HRV parameters and heart rate within rapid-eye-movement (REM) and non-REM (NREM) sleep periods. Results indicated that ANS arousal indexed by HRV was greater during REM compared with NREM sleep and that the REM-NREM difference was greater in the PTSD than in the resilient participants. This effect of PTSD was reduced to non-significance when analyses controlled for REM sleep percentage, which was lower with PTSD. Exploratory analyses revealed that the REM-NREM difference in HRV was correlated with REM sleep percentage in resilient participants, but not with PTSD. In contrast with our data from home settings, the present study did not find increased overall nocturnal ANS arousal with PTSD. Analyses did reveal higher heart rate during initial NREM sleep with more rapid decline over the course of NREM sleep with PTSD compared with resilience. Findings suggest that elevated ANS arousal indexed by heart rate with PTSD is specific to the early part of sleep and possible impairment in regulating ANS activity with PTSD related to REM sleep.
创伤后应激障碍(PTSD)与睡眠障碍有关,包括睡眠阶段的改变,最近还发现夜间自主神经系统(ANS)觉醒增强(即交感神经系统相对于副交感神经系统占主导地位)。数据表明,睡眠有助于调节自主神经系统的活动。在我们之前的动态心率变异性(HRV)监测研究中,在具有心理弹性的参与者(即尽管遭受了高冲击性创伤但从未患过PTSD的个体)中,未发现睡眠与夜间自主神经系统活动之间存在密切关系。在本研究中,我们研究了PTSD与心理弹性对自主神经系统活动的影响,该影响是睡眠阶段和睡眠时间的函数。患有当前PTSD(n = 38)和具有心理弹性(n = 33)的参与者(年龄18 - 35岁)在实验室环境中完成了两次夜间多导睡眠图记录。对第二晚的心电图进行分析,以获取快速眼动(REM)和非快速眼动(NREM)睡眠期的频域HRV参数和心率。结果表明,与NREM睡眠相比,REM睡眠期间由HRV指标的自主神经系统觉醒更大,且PTSD患者的REM - NREM差异大于具有心理弹性的参与者。当分析控制了REM睡眠百分比(PTSD患者的REM睡眠百分比更低)时,PTSD的这种效应降低至无统计学意义。探索性分析表明,HRV的REM - NREM差异与具有心理弹性的参与者的REM睡眠百分比相关,但与PTSD无关。与我们在家中环境的数据相反,本研究未发现PTSD患者夜间总体自主神经系统觉醒增加。分析确实显示,与具有心理弹性的参与者相比,PTSD患者在初始NREM睡眠期间心率更高,且在NREM睡眠过程中下降更快。研究结果表明,PTSD患者以心率指标的自主神经系统觉醒升高在睡眠早期具有特异性,且PTSD患者在调节与REM睡眠相关的自主神经系统活动方面可能存在损害。