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周期性肢体运动患者睡眠依赖性运动序列记忆巩固。

Sleep-dependent motor sequence memory consolidation in individuals with periodic limb movements.

机构信息

The Brain & Mind Institute, Western University, London, Ontario, Canada; Department of Psychology, Western University, London, Ontario, Canada.

The Brain & Mind Institute, Western University, London, Ontario, Canada; The Royal's Institute for Mental Health Research, Ottawa, Ontario, Canada.

出版信息

Sleep Med. 2017 Dec;40:23-32. doi: 10.1016/j.sleep.2017.09.005. Epub 2017 Sep 28.

Abstract

Periodic limb movements (PLMs) during sleep increase with age and are associated with striatal neurodegeneration and dopamine deficiency. Limb movements are often associated with disruptions to non-rapid eye movement (NREM) sleep. Motor skill memory consolidation recruits the striatum, and learning-dependent striatal activation is associated with NREM sleep. Therefore, we investigated whether de novo individuals who significantly experience elevated levels of PLMs but have not been formally diagnosed with periodic limb movement disorder had learning and sleep-related memory deficits and whether these deficits were related to sleep quality and symptom severity. In total, 14 adults with significantly elevated PLMs (PLM condition), 15 age-matched controls (CTRL), and 14 age-matched "disturbed" sleep (through induced leg movements) controls (CTRL-ES) participated. The participants were trained (PM) and retested (AM) on procedural motor sequence learning (MSL) and declarative paired associates memory tasks. Baseline sleep quality was significantly worse in PLM than in CTRL. Despite the continued presence of PLMs in the PLM condition on the experimental night, remarkably, sleep quality improved and arousals decreased, vs. baseline, and did not differ from CTRL. MSL was significantly slower in the PLM condition than in CTRL at training but surprisingly exhibited overnight performance gains, which correlated with reduced arousals. As predicted, CTRL but not CTRL-ES had overnight gains in MSL. Taken together, this suggests that in the PLM condition, sleep quality was normalized following MSL, where they derived the same benefit of sleep to procedural memory consolidation as in CTRL. Sleep did not benefit declarative memory. Although preliminary, these results suggest that MSL in individuals with PLMs may provide a benefit to sleep, which in turn may benefit memory consolidation.

摘要

周期性肢体运动(PLM)在睡眠中随着年龄的增长而增加,与纹状体神经退行性变和多巴胺缺乏有关。肢体运动通常与非快速眼动(NREM)睡眠中断有关。运动技能记忆巩固会募集纹状体,而与学习相关的纹状体激活与 NREM 睡眠有关。因此,我们研究了是否新出现的、经历了明显的 PLM 水平升高但尚未被正式诊断为周期性肢体运动障碍的个体有学习和与睡眠相关的记忆缺陷,以及这些缺陷是否与睡眠质量和症状严重程度有关。共有 14 名 PLM 显著升高的成年人(PLM 组)、15 名年龄匹配的对照组(CTRL)和 14 名年龄匹配的“睡眠干扰”组(通过诱导腿部运动)(CTRL-ES)参与了研究。参与者在程序性运动序列学习(MSL)和陈述性配对联想记忆任务中接受了训练(PM)和再测试(AM)。PLM 组的基线睡眠质量明显差于 CTRL 组。尽管在实验之夜,PLM 组仍持续存在 PLM,但令人惊讶的是,与基线相比,睡眠质量得到了改善,唤醒次数减少,与 CTRL 组没有差异。PLM 组在训练时的 MSL 明显慢于 CTRL 组,但令人惊讶的是,夜间表现有明显提高,这与唤醒次数减少有关。正如预测的那样,只有 CTRL 组而非 CTRL-ES 组在 MSL 中出现了夜间增益。总的来说,这表明在 PLM 组中,MSL 后睡眠质量得到了正常化,他们从睡眠中获得了与 CTRL 组相同的程序性记忆巩固益处。睡眠对陈述性记忆没有好处。尽管这些结果是初步的,但它们表明,PLM 个体的 MSL 可能对睡眠有益,进而可能有益于记忆巩固。

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