scholarly journals Effects of oral temazepam on sleep spindles during non-rapid eye movement sleep: A high-density EEG investigation

2015 ◽  
Vol 25 (10) ◽  
pp. 1600-1610 ◽  
Author(s):  
D.T. Plante ◽  
M.R. Goldstein ◽  
J.D. Cook ◽  
R. Smith ◽  
B.A. Riedner ◽  
...  
2020 ◽  
Vol 2 (2) ◽  
Author(s):  
Erlan Sanchez ◽  
Caroline Arbour ◽  
Héjar El-Khatib ◽  
Karine Marcotte ◽  
Hélène Blais ◽  
...  

Abstract Sleep spindles are an essential part of non-rapid eye movement sleep, notably involved in sleep consolidation, cognition, learning and memory. These oscillatory waves depend on an interaction loop between the thalamus and the cortex, which relies on a structural backbone of thalamo-cortical white matter tracts. It is still largely unknown if the brain can properly produce sleep spindles when it underwent extensive white matter deterioration in these tracts, and we hypothesized that it would affect sleep spindle generation and morphology. We tested this hypothesis with chronic moderate to severe traumatic brain injury (n = 23; 30.5 ± 11.1 years old; 17 m/6f), a unique human model of extensive white matter deterioration, and a healthy control group (n = 27; 30.3 ± 13.4 years old; 21m/6f). Sleep spindles were analysed on a full night of polysomnography over the frontal, central and parietal brain regions, and we measured their density, morphology and sigma-band power. White matter deterioration was quantified using diffusion-weighted MRI, with which we performed both whole-brain voxel-wise analysis (Tract-Based Spatial Statistics) and probabilistic tractography (with High Angular Resolution Diffusion Imaging) to target the thalamo-cortical tracts. Group differences were assessed for all variables and correlations were performed separately in each group, corrected for age and multiple comparisons. Surprisingly, although extensive white matter damage across the brain including all thalamo-cortical tracts was evident in the brain-injured group, sleep spindles remained completely undisrupted when compared to a healthy control group. In addition, almost all sleep spindle characteristics were not associated with the degree of white matter deterioration in the brain-injured group, except that more white matter deterioration correlated with lower spindle frequency over the frontal regions. This study highlights the resilience of sleep spindles to the deterioration of all white matter tracts critical to their existence, as they conserve normal density during non-rapid eye movement sleep with mostly unaltered morphology. We show that even with such a severe traumatic event, the brain has the ability to adapt or to withstand alterations in order to conserve normal sleep spindles.


Neurosurgery ◽  
1984 ◽  
Vol 14 (4) ◽  
pp. 495-498 ◽  
Author(s):  
William R. Jankel ◽  
Ernst Niedermeyer ◽  
Martin Graf ◽  
Michael J. Kalsher

Abstract We report a patient with torsion dystonia whose polysomnographic recordings revealed poor sleep and a pronounced and almost continuous type of spindle activity during non-rapid eye movement sleep. Rapid eye movement sleep was also reduced. These changes proved to be independent of medications. After a clinically successful unilateral thalamic operation, a normalization of sleep parameters and a reduction of the high amplitude sleep spindles was observed. implying that the regulation of sleep spindles and the advancement of dystonic symptoms are affected by a common mechanism.


2016 ◽  
Vol 127 (2) ◽  
pp. 1436-1444 ◽  
Author(s):  
David T. Plante ◽  
Michael R. Goldstein ◽  
Jesse D. Cook ◽  
Richard Smith ◽  
Brady A. Riedner ◽  
...  

2007 ◽  
Vol 104 (32) ◽  
pp. 13164-13169 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. Schabus ◽  
T. T. Dang-Vu ◽  
G. Albouy ◽  
E. Balteau ◽  
M. Boly ◽  
...  

SLEEP ◽  
2017 ◽  
Vol 40 (suppl_1) ◽  
pp. A248-A248
Author(s):  
DT Plante ◽  
JD Cook ◽  
MR Goldstein ◽  
ML Prairie ◽  
R Smith ◽  
...  

SLEEP ◽  
2022 ◽  
Author(s):  
Dimitrios Mylonas ◽  
Sasha Machado ◽  
Olivia Larson ◽  
Rudra Patel ◽  
Roy Cox ◽  
...  

Abstract Study Objectives Converging evidence from neuroimaging, sleep, and genetic studies suggests that dysregulation of thalamocortical interactions mediated by the thalamic reticular nucleus (TRN) contribute to autism spectrum disorder (ASD). Sleep spindles assay TRN function, and their coordination with cortical slow oscillations (SOs) indexes thalamocortical communication. These oscillations mediate memory consolidation during sleep. In the present study, we comprehensively characterized spindles and their coordination with SOs in relation to memory and age in children with ASD. Methods Nineteen children and adolescents with ASD, without intellectual disability, and 18 typically developing (TD) peers, aged 9-17, completed a home polysomnography study with testing on a spatial memory task before and after sleep. Spindles, SOs, and their coordination were characterized during stages 2 (N2) and 3 (N3) non-rapid eye movement sleep. Results ASD participants showed disrupted SO-spindle coordination during N2 sleep. Spindles peaked later in SO upstates and their timing was less consistent. They also showed a spindle density (#/min) deficit during N3 sleep. Both groups showed significant sleep-dependent memory consolidation, but its relations with spindle density differed. While TD participants showed the expected positive correlations, ASD participants showed the opposite. Conclusions The disrupted SO-spindle coordination and spindle deficit provide further evidence of abnormal thalamocortical interactions and TRN dysfunction in ASD. The inverse relations of spindle density with memory suggest a different function for spindles in ASD than TD. We propose that abnormal sleep oscillations reflect genetically mediated disruptions of TRN-dependent thalamocortical circuit development that contribute to the manifestations of ASD and are potentially treatable.


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