Institute of Clinical Medicine, Faculty of Medicine, University of Oslo, Oslo, Norway.
Department of Neurosurgery, Oslo University Hospital - Rikshospitalet, Oslo, Norway.
Brain. 2021 Apr 12;144(3):863-874. doi: 10.1093/brain/awaa443.
It remains an enigma why human beings spend one-third of their life asleep. Experimental data suggest that sleep is required for clearance of waste products from brain metabolism. This has, however, never been verified in humans. The primary aim of the present study was to examine in vivo whether one night of total sleep deprivation affects molecular clearance from the human brain. Secondarily, we examined whether clearance was affected by subsequent sleep. Multiphase MRI with standardized T1 sequences was performed up to 48 h after intrathecal administration of the contrast agent gadobutrol (0.5 ml of 1 mmol/ml), which served as a tracer molecule. Using FreeSurfer software, we quantified tracer enrichment within 85 brain regions as percentage change from baseline of normalized T1 signals. The cerebral tracer enrichment was compared between two cohorts of individuals; one cohort (n = 7) underwent total sleep deprivation from Day 1 to Day 2 (sleep deprivation group) while an age and gender-matched control group (n = 17; sleep group) was allowed free sleep from Day 1 to Day 2. From Day 2 to 3 all individuals were allowed free sleep. The tracer enriched the brains of the two groups similarly. Sleep deprivation was the sole intervention. One night of sleep deprivation impaired clearance of the tracer substance from most brain regions, including the cerebral cortex, white matter and limbic structures, as demonstrated on the morning of Day 2 after intervention (sleep deprivation/sleep). Moreover, the impaired cerebral clearance in the sleep deprivation group was not compensated by subsequent sleep from Day 2 to 3. The present results provide in vivo evidence that one night of total sleep deprivation impairs molecular clearance from the human brain, and that humans do not catch up on lost sleep.
人类为什么要花费三分之一的时间在睡眠上,这仍然是一个谜。实验数据表明,睡眠是清除大脑代谢废物所必需的。然而,这在人类身上从未得到过验证。本研究的主要目的是在体内检查一夜完全剥夺睡眠是否会影响人类大脑的分子清除。其次,我们检查了随后的睡眠是否会影响清除。在鞘内给予对比剂钆布醇(0.5 毫升 1 毫摩尔/毫升)后,使用多相位 MRI 结合标准化 T1 序列,进行了长达 48 小时的检查,该对比剂用作示踪分子。使用 FreeSurfer 软件,我们量化了 85 个脑区的示踪剂富集情况,即与基线相比归一化 T1 信号的百分比变化。我们比较了两个队列的个体之间的脑内示踪剂富集情况;一组(n=7)从第 1 天到第 2 天完全剥夺睡眠(睡眠剥夺组),而年龄和性别匹配的对照组(n=17;睡眠组)从第 1 天到第 2 天可以自由睡眠。从第 2 天到第 3 天,所有个体都可以自由睡眠。两组的示踪剂均使大脑富集。睡眠剥夺是唯一的干预措施。一夜的睡眠剥夺会损害大多数脑区,包括大脑皮层、白质和边缘结构中示踪剂物质的清除,这在干预后的第 2 天早上就可以观察到(睡眠剥夺/睡眠)。此外,睡眠剥夺组的大脑清除受损并未通过第 2 天到第 3 天的后续睡眠得到补偿。本研究结果提供了体内证据,表明一夜的完全睡眠剥夺会损害人类大脑的分子清除,而且人类不会弥补失去的睡眠。