CIRUS, Centre for Sleep and Chronobiology, Woolcock Institute of Medical Research, The University of Sydney, NSW, Australia; College of Nursing and Health Sciences, Flinders University, Bedford Park, SA, Australia; Adelaide Institute for Sleep Health: A Flinders Centre of Research Excellence, College of Medicine and Public Health, Flinders University, Bedford Park, SA, Australia.
Faculty of Pharmacy, The University of Sydney, Sydney, Australia.
Sleep Med. 2021 Oct;86:126-134. doi: 10.1016/j.sleep.2021.01.035. Epub 2021 Feb 9.
OBJECTIVE/BACKGROUND: The aim of this study was to examine the relationship between overnight consolidation of implicit statistical learning with spindle frequency EEG activity and slow frequency delta power during non-rapid eye movement (NREM) sleep in obstructive sleep apnea (OSA).
PATIENTS/METHODS: Forty-seven OSA participants completed the experiment. Prior to sleep, participants performed a reaction time cover task containing hidden patterns of pictures, about which participants were not informed. After the familiarisation phase, participants underwent overnight polysomnography. 24 h after the familiarisation phase, participants performed a test phase to assess their learning of the hidden patterns, expressed as a percentage of the number of correctly identified patterns. Spindle frequency activity (SFA) and delta power (0.5-4.5 Hz), were quantified from NREM electroencephalography. Associations between statistical learning and sleep EEG, and OSA severity measures were examined.
SFA in NREM sleep in frontal and central brain regions was positively correlated with statistical learning scores (r = 0.41 to 0.31, p = 0.006 to 0.044). In multiple regression, greater SFA and longer sleep onset latency were significant predictors of better statistical learning performance. Delta power and OSA severity were not significantly correlated with statistical learning.
These findings suggest spindle activity may serve as a marker of statistical learning capability in OSA. This work provides novel insight into how altered sleep physiology relates to consolidation of implicitly learnt information in patients with moderate to severe OSA.
目的/背景:本研究旨在探讨阻塞性睡眠呼吸暂停(OSA)患者非快速眼动(NREM)睡眠中,内隐统计学习的夜间巩固与纺锤波频率脑电图活动和慢频 delta 功率之间的关系。
患者/方法:47 名 OSA 参与者完成了实验。在睡眠前,参与者完成了一项包含隐藏图片模式的反应时掩蔽任务,参与者对此并不知情。在熟悉阶段后,参与者接受了整夜多导睡眠图监测。在熟悉阶段 24 小时后,参与者进行了测试阶段,以评估他们对隐藏模式的学习程度,用正确识别模式的百分比表示。从 NREM 脑电图中量化了纺锤波频率活动(SFA)和 delta 功率(0.5-4.5 Hz)。考察了统计学习与睡眠脑电图以及 OSA 严重程度指标之间的关联。
额叶和中央脑区的 NREM 睡眠中的 SFA 与统计学习得分呈正相关(r=0.41 至 0.31,p=0.006 至 0.044)。在多元回归中,更大的 SFA 和更长的睡眠潜伏期是更好的统计学习表现的显著预测因素。Delta 功率和 OSA 严重程度与统计学习无显著相关性。
这些发现表明,纺锤波活动可能是 OSA 患者统计学习能力的标志物。这项工作为中度至重度 OSA 患者的睡眠生理学改变与内隐学习信息的巩固之间的关系提供了新的见解。