Department of Sports Medicine and Nutrition, University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania; Department of Psychiatry, University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania.
University of Pittsburgh Medical Center, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania.
Biol Psychiatry Cogn Neurosci Neuroimaging. 2021 Nov;6(11):1110-1117. doi: 10.1016/j.bpsc.2020.12.013. Epub 2021 Jan 12.
Preliminary evidence indicates that non-rapid eye movement (NREM) sleep is implicated in enhancing working memory (WM) performance across days in healthy individuals. While REM sleep has been implicated in other forms of memory, its role in WM remains unclear. Further, the relationship between sleep changes and WM improvement is largely unknown in posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD). Examining the relationship between changes in sleep and WM improvement in healthy participants and participants with PTSD may inform cognitive enhancement strategies and intervention targets.
Repeated assessments of WM and overnight measurement of NREM and REM sleep parameters were performed in 79 participants (participants with PTSD: n = 33) during a 48-hour laboratory stay. Relationships between sleep parameter changes, WM performance changes, and clinical characteristics were analyzed in PTSD and healthy groups.
A between-night enhancement in both NREM and REM sleep parameters in frontoparietal areas predicted across-day better WM performance in healthy participants, particularly in those with improved performance. In contrast, in participants with PTSD, an enhancement of these sleep parameters predicted a worse WM performance and was also associated with more PTSD-related sleep disturbances.
This study shows that higher sleep activity in frontoparietal areas leads to enhanced WM performance in healthy individuals, whereas in individuals with PTSD, it likely reflects the presence of sleep disturbances that interfere with WM improvement. Interventions focused on addressing sleep disturbances could therefore ameliorate cognitive impairments in individuals with PTSD.
初步证据表明,非快速眼动 (NREM) 睡眠有助于在健康个体中增强跨日工作记忆 (WM) 表现。虽然 REM 睡眠与其他形式的记忆有关,但它在 WM 中的作用仍不清楚。此外,在创伤后应激障碍 (PTSD) 中,睡眠变化与 WM 改善之间的关系在很大程度上尚不清楚。研究健康参与者和 PTSD 参与者之间睡眠变化与 WM 改善之间的关系,可能有助于为认知增强策略和干预目标提供信息。
在 48 小时的实验室住宿期间,对 79 名参与者(PTSD 参与者:n=33)进行了 WM 的重复评估和 NREM 和 REM 睡眠参数的整夜测量。在 PTSD 和健康组中分析了睡眠参数变化、WM 表现变化和临床特征之间的关系。
前额叶区域 NREM 和 REM 睡眠参数的夜间增强,预测了健康参与者跨日更好的 WM 表现,特别是在表现提高的参与者中。相比之下,在 PTSD 参与者中,这些睡眠参数的增强预示着 WM 表现更差,并且还与更多与 PTSD 相关的睡眠障碍有关。
这项研究表明,前额叶区域更高的睡眠活动导致健康个体 WM 表现增强,而在 PTSD 个体中,它可能反映了睡眠障碍的存在,这会干扰 WM 的改善。因此,专注于解决睡眠障碍的干预措施可能会改善 PTSD 个体的认知障碍。