Hasler Brant P, Soehner Adriane M, Wallace Meredith L, Logan Ryan W, Ngari Wambui, Forbes Erika E, Buysse Daniel J, Clark Duncan B
Department of Psychiatry, University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine, Pittsburgh, PA, USA.
Department of Pharmacology and Experimental Therapeutics, Boston University School of Medicine, Boston, MA, USA.
Psychol Med. 2021 Mar 17:1-9. doi: 10.1017/S0033291721000787.
Sleep and circadian timing shifts later during adolescence, conflicting with early school start times, and resulting in circadian misalignment. Although circadian misalignment has been linked to depression, substance use, and altered reward function, a paucity of experimental studies precludes the determination of causality. Here we tested, for the first time, whether experimentally-imposed circadian misalignment alters the neural response to monetary reward and/or response inhibition.
Healthy adolescents (n = 25, ages 13-17) completed two in-lab sleep schedules in counterbalanced order: An 'aligned' condition based on typical summer sleep-wake times (0000-0930) and a 'misaligned' condition mimicking earlier school year sleep-wake times (2000-0530). Participants completed morning and afternoon functional magnetic resonance imaging scans during each condition, including monetary reward (morning only) and response inhibition (morning and afternoon) tasks. Total sleep time and circadian phase were assessed via actigraphy and salivary melatonin, respectively.
Bilateral ventral striatal (VS) activation during reward outcome was lower during the Misaligned condition after accounting for the prior night's total sleep time. Bilateral VS activation during reward anticipation was lower during the Misaligned condition, including after accounting for covariates, but did not survive correction for multiple comparisons. Right inferior frontal gyrus activation during response inhibition was lower during the Misaligned condition, before and after accounting for total sleep time and vigilant attention, but only during the morning scan.
Our findings provide novel experimental evidence that circadian misalignment analogous to that resulting from school schedules may have measurable impacts on healthy adolescents' reward processing and inhibition of prepotent responses.
睡眠和昼夜节律在青春期会延迟,这与学校早开课时间相冲突,导致昼夜节律失调。尽管昼夜节律失调与抑郁症、物质使用和奖赏功能改变有关,但缺乏实验研究,无法确定因果关系。在这里,我们首次测试了实验性诱导的昼夜节律失调是否会改变对金钱奖励和/或反应抑制的神经反应。
健康青少年(n = 25,年龄13 - 17岁)以平衡顺序完成两种实验室睡眠时间表:一种是基于典型夏季睡眠 - 觉醒时间(00:00 - 09:30)的“对齐”状态,另一种是模拟学年早期睡眠 - 觉醒时间(20:00 - 05:30)的“失调”状态。参与者在每种状态下完成上午和下午的功能磁共振成像扫描,包括金钱奖励任务(仅上午)和反应抑制任务(上午和下午)。分别通过活动记录仪和唾液褪黑素评估总睡眠时间和昼夜节律相位。
在考虑前一晚的总睡眠时间后,失调状态下奖励结果期间双侧腹侧纹状体(VS)激活较低。在失调状态下,奖励预期期间双侧VS激活较低,包括在考虑协变量后,但在多重比较校正后未通过检验。在考虑总睡眠时间和警觉注意力前后,失调状态下反应抑制期间右侧额下回激活较低,但仅在上午扫描时出现。
我们的研究结果提供了新的实验证据,即类似于学校时间表导致的昼夜节律失调可能对健康青少年的奖赏处理和优势反应抑制产生可测量的影响。