Gradwohl Gideon, Olini Nadja, Huber Reto
Child Development Center, University Children's Hospital Zurich, Zurich, Switzerland.
Departement of Computer Sciences, Lev Academic Center, Jerusalem, Israel.
BMC Neurosci. 2017 Feb 7;18(1):24. doi: 10.1186/s12868-017-0343-6.
Sleep is regulated by two main processes. The circadian process provides a 24-h rhythm and the homeostatic process reflects sleep pressure, which increases in the course of wakefulness and decreases during sleep. Both of these processes undergo major changes during development. For example, sleep homeostasis, measured by means of electroencephalogram (EEG) slow-wave activity (SWA, EEG power between 0.5 and 4.5 Hz), peaks around puberty and decreases during adolescence. In humans and rats these changes have been related to cortical maturation. We aimed to explore whether additional parameters as state dynamic (dynamic of sleep/wake behavior) parameters of movement velocity, trajectories and micro-arousals provide markers of rat maturation. The state dynamics reflect the stability of sleep within a specific sleep stage. We applied a state space technique (SST), a quantitative and unbiased method, based on frequency band ratios of the EEG to analyze the development of different sleep/wake states and state dynamics between vigilance states. EEG of recording electrodes at the frontal and parietal lobe were analyzed using conventional scoring criteria and SST.
We found that movement velocity, trajectories between sleep states and micro-arousals changed as an inverse U-shaped curve across maturation. At all ages, movement velocity over the frontal lobe is higher compared to the parietal lobe, while the number of trajectories and micro-arousals are reduced. Furthermore, we showed that SWA correlates negatively with movement velocity and the number of micro-arousals. The velocity in the parietal lobe correlates positively with the number of micro-arousals. As for SWA, trajectories seem primarily to depend on sleep homeostasis regulatory mechanisms while the movement velocity seems to be modulated by other sleep regulators like the circadian rhythms.
New insights in sleep/wake state dynamics are established with the SST, because trajectories, micro-arousals and velocities are not evident by traditional scoring methods. These dynamic measures may represent new indicators for changes in sleep regulatory processes across maturation.
睡眠由两个主要过程调节。昼夜节律过程提供24小时的节律,而稳态过程反映睡眠压力,睡眠压力在清醒过程中增加,在睡眠期间减少。这两个过程在发育过程中都会发生重大变化。例如,通过脑电图(EEG)慢波活动(SWA,0.5至4.5赫兹之间的EEG功率)测量的睡眠稳态在青春期左右达到峰值,并在青春期期间下降。在人类和大鼠中,这些变化与皮质成熟有关。我们旨在探讨运动速度、轨迹和微觉醒等额外的状态动态(睡眠/觉醒行为动态)参数是否可作为大鼠成熟的标志。状态动态反映了特定睡眠阶段内睡眠的稳定性。我们应用了一种状态空间技术(SST),这是一种基于EEG频段比率的定量且无偏差的方法,来分析不同睡眠/觉醒状态的发展以及警觉状态之间的状态动态。使用传统评分标准和SST分析额叶和顶叶记录电极的EEG。
我们发现,运动速度、睡眠状态之间的轨迹和微觉醒在成熟过程中呈倒U形曲线变化。在所有年龄段,额叶上的运动速度均高于顶叶,而轨迹数量和微觉醒数量则减少。此外,我们表明SWA与运动速度和微觉醒数量呈负相关。顶叶的速度与微觉醒数量呈正相关。至于SWA,轨迹似乎主要取决于睡眠稳态调节机制,而运动速度似乎受昼夜节律等其他睡眠调节因子的调节。
通过SST建立了对睡眠/觉醒状态动态的新认识,因为传统评分方法无法明显看出轨迹、微觉醒和速度。这些动态测量可能代表了成熟过程中睡眠调节过程变化的新指标。