Kilgore-Gomez Alexandrea, Norato Gina, Theodore William H, Inati Sara K, Rahman Shareena A
EEG Section, National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke, Bethesda, Maryland, USA.
Biostatistics Group, National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke, Bethesda, Maryland, USA.
Epilepsia. 2024 Apr;65(4):995-1005. doi: 10.1111/epi.17904. Epub 2024 Feb 27.
A well-established bidirectional relationship exists between sleep and epilepsy. Patients with epilepsy tend to have less efficient sleep and shorter rapid eye movement (REM) sleep. Seizures are far more likely to arise from sleep transitions and non-REM sleep compared to REM sleep. Delay in REM onset or reduction in REM duration may have reciprocal interactions with seizure occurrence. Greater insight into the relationship between REM sleep and seizure occurrence is essential to our understanding of circadian patterns and predictability of seizure activity. We assessed a cohort of adults undergoing evaluation of drug-resistant epilepsy to examine whether REM sleep prior to or following seizures is delayed in latency or reduced in quantity.
We used a spectrogram-guided approach to review the video-electroencephalograms of patients' epilepsy monitoring unit admissions for sleep scoring to determine sleep variables.
In our cohort of patients, we found group- and individual-level delay of REM latency and reduced REM duration when patients experienced a seizure before the primary sleep period (PSP) of interest or during the PSP of interest. A significant increase in REM latency and decrease in REM quantity were observed on nights where a seizure occurred within 4 h of sleep onset. No change in REM variables was found when investigating seizures that occurred the day after the PSP of interest. Our study is the first to provide insight about a perisleep period, which we defined as 4-h periods before and after the PSP.
Our results demonstrate a significant relationship between seizures occurring prior to the PSP, during the PSP, and in the 4-h perisleep period and a delay in REM latency. These findings have implications for developing a biomarker of seizure detection as well as longer term seizure risk monitoring.
睡眠与癫痫之间存在一种已被充分证实的双向关系。癫痫患者的睡眠往往效率较低,快速眼动(REM)睡眠较短。与REM睡眠相比,癫痫发作更有可能源于睡眠转换期和非REM睡眠。REM睡眠开始延迟或REM睡眠时间缩短可能与癫痫发作存在相互作用。深入了解REM睡眠与癫痫发作之间的关系对于我们理解昼夜节律模式和癫痫活动的可预测性至关重要。我们评估了一组接受耐药性癫痫评估的成年人,以检查癫痫发作之前或之后的REM睡眠是否在潜伏期延迟或数量减少。
我们采用频谱图引导的方法回顾患者癫痫监测单元住院期间的视频脑电图进行睡眠评分,以确定睡眠变量。
在我们的患者队列中,当患者在感兴趣的主要睡眠期(PSP)之前或期间经历癫痫发作时,我们发现了REM潜伏期的组水平和个体水平延迟以及REM睡眠时间缩短。在睡眠开始后4小时内发生癫痫发作的夜晚,观察到REM潜伏期显著增加,REM数量减少。在调查感兴趣的PSP后一天发生的癫痫发作时,未发现REM变量有变化。我们的研究首次提供了关于睡眠周围期的见解,我们将其定义为PSP之前和之后的4小时时间段。
我们的结果表明,在PSP之前、期间以及睡眠周围期4小时内发生的癫痫发作与REM潜伏期延迟之间存在显著关系。这些发现对于开发癫痫检测生物标志物以及长期癫痫风险监测具有重要意义。