Charpentier-Hélary Maïlis, de la Chapelle Aurélien, Linard Maxime, André-Obadia Nathalie, Boulogne Sébastien, Catenoix Hélène, Jung Julien, Rheims Sylvain, Schiller Katharina, Frauscher Birgit, Ruby Perrine, Peter-Derex Laure
Lyon Neuroscience Research Center; CNRS UMR 5292, INSERM U1028, Lyon 1 University, Lyon, France.
Department of Functional Neurology and Epileptology, Hospices Civils de Lyon, Lyon 1 University, Lyon, France.
J Sleep Res. 2025 Oct;34(5):e14464. doi: 10.1111/jsr.14464. Epub 2025 Jan 31.
Epilepsy impacts cognition during wakefulness. As epileptic activity is present and even augmented during sleep, epilepsy could also influence sleep-related cognitive processes. However, whether epilepsy modulates sleep-related experiences like dreaming remains poorly known. Here, we prospectively investigated the characteristics and determinants of dreaming in patients with epilepsy. Consecutive adult patients with epilepsy and no major cognitive deficit were recruited in an epilepsy outpatient clinic. They completed a questionnaire about their dreams, sleep and epilepsy over the past year. Medical data on epilepsy characteristics were gathered from the medical file. A generalised linear model was used to explore the determinants of dream recall frequency (DRF). We included 300 patients, with a mean (standard deviation [SD]) age of 40.4 (13.4) years and 51.3% female; 28.6% had more than one seizure/month, and 34.7% already had seizures during sleep. Patients recalled dreams on an average of 1.6 (1.5) days/week and 11% had one or more nightmare/week. Younger age, higher number of nocturnal awakenings, and lower seizures frequency predicted a higher DRF. In patients with focal epilepsy (65.3%), the localisation of the epileptic focus in the parieto-occipital area was negatively associated with DRF. Regarding dream content, 34.0% of patients reported having already dreamt about epilepsy. Dreams of seizures were associated with sleep-related seizures (p = 0.034) and dreams of epilepsy were associated with nightmare frequency (p = 0.004). Our results show that patients with epilepsy share several determinants of DRF (age, awakenings, role of the parieto-occipital area) with healthy subjects. In addition, epilepsy-related factors (seizure frequency, focus localisation) also impact DRF. Investigating dreams in patients with epilepsy can provide information on their epilepsy and their sleep.
癫痫会影响清醒时的认知。由于癫痫活动在睡眠期间也存在甚至增强,癫痫也可能影响与睡眠相关的认知过程。然而,癫痫是否会调节诸如做梦等与睡眠相关的体验仍鲜为人知。在此,我们前瞻性地研究了癫痫患者做梦的特征和决定因素。在一家癫痫门诊招募了连续的成年癫痫患者,且这些患者无重大认知缺陷。他们完成了一份关于过去一年中梦境、睡眠和癫痫的问卷。从病历中收集了关于癫痫特征的医学数据。使用广义线性模型来探究梦回忆频率(DRF)的决定因素。我们纳入了300名患者,平均(标准差[SD])年龄为40.4(13.4)岁,女性占51.3%;28.6%的患者每月发作不止一次,34.7%的患者在睡眠期间已有发作。患者平均每周有1.6(1.5)天回忆起梦境,11%的患者每周有一次或多次噩梦。年龄较小、夜间觉醒次数较多以及癫痫发作频率较低预示着较高的DRF。在局灶性癫痫患者(65.3%)中,癫痫病灶位于顶枕区与DRF呈负相关。关于梦境内容,34.0%的患者报告曾梦到过癫痫。癫痫发作的梦境与睡眠相关癫痫发作有关(p = 0.034),癫痫的梦境与噩梦频率有关(p = 0.004)。我们的结果表明,癫痫患者与健康受试者在DRF的几个决定因素(年龄、觉醒、顶枕区的作用)方面存在共性。此外,与癫痫相关的因素(发作频率、病灶定位)也会影响DRF。研究癫痫患者的梦境可以提供有关其癫痫和睡眠的信息。