Ikawa Yasuha, Mochizuki Ayako, Katayama Keisuke, Kato Takafumi, Ikeda Minako, Abe Yuka, Nakamura Shiro, Nakayama Kiyomi, Wakabayashi Noriyuki, Baba Kazuyoshi, Inoue Tomio
Department of Oral Physiology, Showa University School of Dentistry, 1-5-8, Hatanodai, Shinagawa, Tokyo 142-8555, Japan; Removable Partial Prosthodontics, Oral Health Sciences, Graduate School of Medical and Dental Sciences, Tokyo Medical and Dental University, 1-5-45, Yushima, Bunkyo, Tokyo 113-8549, Japan.
Department of Oral Physiology, Showa University School of Dentistry, 1-5-8, Hatanodai, Shinagawa, Tokyo 142-8555, Japan.
Neurosci Res. 2016 Dec;113:48-55. doi: 10.1016/j.neures.2016.07.004. Epub 2016 Jul 21.
In this study, we investigated the effects of chronic administration of the selective serotonin reuptake inhibitor (SSRI) citalopram on sleep/wake cycles and masseter (jaw-closing) muscle electromyogram (EMG) activity over a 24-h period. From the dark to the light period, the times of wakefulness decreased, while those of non-rapid eye movement (NREM) and REM sleep increased. Citalopram did not induce major alterations in the temporal changes of sleep-wake distributions, except for leading to a decrease in the time of NREM sleep during the light period and an increase in the durations of REM sleep episodes. Moreover, citalopram did not modify mean masseter EMG activity during any of the vigilance states and did not affect the temporal changes related to the shifts between dark/light periods. However, citalopram increased the time engaged in masseter EMG activation during NREM sleep in the second and the first halves of the dark and light periods, respectively. These results suggest that chronic citalopram treatment does not affect the temporal changes of sleep-wake distributions, but has a limited facilitatory influence that fails to increase the number of epochs of high levels of masseter muscle activation.