Mantua Janna, Henry Owen S, Garskovas Nolan F, Spencer Rebecca M C
Department of Psychological and Brain Sciences, Neuroscienceand Behavior Program, Amherst, MA.
Department of Psychological and Brain Sciences, Commonwealth Honors College, Amherst, MA.
Sleep. 2017 Jun 1;40(6). doi: 10.1093/sleep/zsx062.
A single traumatic brain injury (TBI), even when mild (ie, concussion), can cause lasting consequences. Individuals with a history of chronic (>1-year prior) mild TBI have an increased risk of mood disturbances (eg, depression, suicide). This population also has lingering sleep alterations, including poor sleep quality and changes in sleep stage proportions. Given these sleep deficits, we aimed to test whether sleep-dependent emotional memory consolidation is reduced in this population. We utilized a mild TBI group (3.7 ± 2.9 years post injury) and an uninjured (non-TBI) population.
Participants viewed negative and neutral images both before and after a 12-hour period containing sleep ("Sleep" group) or an equivalent period of time spent awake ("Wake" group). Participants rated images for valence/arousal at both sessions, and memory recognition was tested at session two.
The TBI group had less rapid eye movement (REM), longer REM latency, and more sleep complaints. Sleep-dependent memory consolidation of nonemotional images was present in all participants. However, consolidation of negative images was only present in the non-TBI group. A lack of differentiation between the TBI Sleep and Wake groups was due to poor performance in the sleep group and, unexpectedly, enhanced performance in the wake group. Additionally, although the non-TBI participants habituated to negative images over a waking period, the TBI participants did not.
We propose disrupted sleep- and wake-dependent emotional processing contributes to poor emotional outcomes following chronic, mild TBI. This work has broad implications, as roughly one-third of the US population will sustain a mild TBI during their lifetime.
单次创伤性脑损伤(TBI),即使是轻度的(即脑震荡),也可能导致持久的后果。有慢性(>1年前)轻度TBI病史的个体出现情绪障碍(如抑郁、自杀)的风险增加。该人群还存在持续的睡眠改变,包括睡眠质量差和睡眠阶段比例变化。鉴于这些睡眠缺陷,我们旨在测试该人群中依赖睡眠的情绪记忆巩固是否减少。我们使用了一个轻度TBI组(受伤后3.7±2.9年)和一个未受伤的(非TBI)人群。
参与者在包含睡眠的12小时时间段(“睡眠”组)或同等时长的清醒时间段(“清醒”组)前后观看负面和中性图像。参与者在两个阶段都对图像的效价/唤醒程度进行评分,并在第二阶段测试记忆识别。
TBI组的快速眼动(REM)睡眠较少,REM潜伏期较长,且睡眠抱怨较多。所有参与者都存在非情绪图像的睡眠依赖性记忆巩固。然而,负面图像的巩固仅存在于非TBI组中。TBI睡眠组和清醒组之间缺乏差异是由于睡眠组表现不佳,以及出乎意料的是清醒组表现增强。此外,尽管非TBI参与者在清醒期间对负面图像产生了习惯化,但TBI参与者没有。
我们提出,睡眠和清醒依赖性情绪处理的中断导致了慢性轻度TBI后不良的情绪结果。这项工作具有广泛的意义,因为大约三分之一的美国人口在其一生中会遭受轻度TBI。