Department of Neurology and Clinical Research Center of Neurological Disease, The Second Affiliated Hospital of Soochow University, Suzhou, China.
Jiangsu Key Laboratory of Neuropsychiatric Diseases and Institute of Neuroscience, Soochow University, Suzhou, China.
Sleep Med. 2024 Sep;121:219-225. doi: 10.1016/j.sleep.2024.07.010. Epub 2024 Jul 10.
Depression and sleep disturbances are commonly seen non-motor symptoms in patients with Parkinson's disease (PD). This study used polysomnography to examine the relationship between mild-moderate depression in PD and sleep characteristics, particularly slow wave activities (SWA).
59 PD patients were split into two groups: nd-PD (n = 27) (patients with PD without depression) and d-PD (n = 32) (patients with PD with mild-moderate depression). Their clinical features, polysomnography parameters, and demographics were evaluated. Early and late sleep SWA spectrum densities and overnight SWA decline in different brain regions were particularly analyzed.
Non-rapid eye movement 3 (N3) sleep duration and percentage were greater in the d-PD group. N3 percentage was linked to depression (p = 0.014). During late sleep, higher SWA (0.5-4Hz) in the frontal and central regions, higher low-SWA (0.5-2Hz) in the whole brain, central and occipital regions, and higher high-SWA (2-4Hz) in the frontal region was observed in the d-PD group. During early sleep, there was also higher low-SWA (0.5-2Hz) in the occipital region. Patients in d-PD group exhibited reduced overnight high-SWA (2-4Hz) decline (Δhigh-SWA) in the whole brain and occipital regions. Δhigh-SWA(2-4Hz) in the occipital region were associated with depression (p = 0.049).
PD patients with mild-moderate depression have impaired slow wave sleep, exhibiting as increased N3 sleep, SWA, and reduced overnight SWA decline. This implies that synaptic strength reduction during sleep and impaired synaptic homeostasis regulation may be associated with depression in PD. Reduced overnight high-SWA decline in the occipital region may serve as a novel electrophysiological biomarker for indicating depression in PD.
抑郁和睡眠障碍是帕金森病(PD)患者常见的非运动症状。本研究使用多导睡眠图检查 PD 中轻度至中度抑郁与睡眠特征的关系,特别是慢波活动(SWA)。
将 59 名 PD 患者分为两组:nd-PD(n=27)(无抑郁的 PD 患者)和 d-PD(n=32)(有轻度至中度抑郁的 PD 患者)。评估了他们的临床特征、多导睡眠图参数和人口统计学特征。特别分析了不同脑区的早期和晚期睡眠 SWA 谱密度以及夜间 SWA 下降。
d-PD 组非快速眼动 3 期(N3)睡眠时间和百分比更大。N3 百分比与抑郁有关(p=0.014)。在晚期睡眠中,额叶和中央区域的 SWA(0.5-4Hz)较高,全脑、中央和枕叶区域的低 SWA(0.5-2Hz)较高,额叶区域的高 SWA(2-4Hz)较高。在早期睡眠中,枕叶区域的低 SWA(0.5-2Hz)也较高。d-PD 组患者夜间全脑和枕叶区域的高 SWA(2-4Hz)下降(Δhigh-SWA)减少。枕叶区的Δhigh-SWA(2-4Hz)与抑郁有关(p=0.049)。
轻度至中度抑郁的 PD 患者存在慢波睡眠受损,表现为 N3 睡眠增加、SWA 增加和夜间 SWA 下降减少。这表明睡眠期间突触强度的降低和突触稳态调节的受损可能与 PD 中的抑郁有关。枕叶区夜间高 SWA 下降减少可能是 PD 中抑郁的一种新的电生理生物标志物。