Brain connectivity is altered by extreme physical exercise during non-REM sleep and wakefulness: indications from EEG and fMRI studies.

IF 0.8 4区 医学 Q4 NEUROSCIENCES Archives Italiennes De Biologie Pub Date : 2016-12-01 DOI:10.12871/00039829201641
D Menicucci, C Gentili, A Piarulli, M Laurino, S Pellegrini, F Mastorci, R Bedini, D Montanaro, L Sebastiani, A Gemignani
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引用次数: 2

Abstract

Brain connectivity is associated to behavioral states (e.g. wake, sleep) and modified by physical activity although, to date, it is not clear which components (e.g. hypothalamus-pituitary-adrenal axis hormones, cytokines) associated to the exercise are involved. In this pilot study, we used extreme exercise (UltraTriathlon) as a model to investigate physical-activity-related changes of brain connectivity. We studied post-race brain synchronization during wakefulness and sleep as well as possible correlations between exercise-related cytokines/hormones and synchronization features. For wakefulness, global synchronization was evaluated by estimating from fMRI data (12 athletes) the brain global connectivity (GC). GC increased in several brain regions, mainly related to sensory-motor activity, emotional modulation and response to stress that may foster rapid exchange of information across regions, and reflect post-race internally-focused mental activity or disengagement from previous motor programs. No significant correlations between cytokines/hormones and GC were found. For sleep (8 athletes), synchronization was evaluated by estimating the local-(cortical) and global-related (thalamo- cortical) EEG features associated to the phenomenon of Sleep Slow Oscillations (SSO) of NREM sleep. Results showed that: power of fast rhythms in the baseline preceding the SSO increased in midline and parietal regions; amplitude and duration of SSOs increased, mainly in posterior areas; sigma modulation in the SSO up state decreased. In the post race, IL-10 positively correlated with fast rhythms baseline, SSO rate and positive slope; IL-1ra and cortisol inversely correlated with SSO duration; TNF-α and C-reactive protein positively correlated with fast rhythm modulation in the SSO up state. Sleep results suggest that: arousal during sleep, estimated by baseline fast rhythms, is increased; SSO may be sustained by cortical excitability, linked to anti-inflammatory markers (IL-10); thalamo-cortical entrainment, (sigma modulation), is impaired in athletes with higher inflammatory markers.

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脑电图和功能磁共振成像研究表明,在非快速眼动睡眠和清醒状态下,极端体育锻炼会改变大脑连通性。
大脑连通性与行为状态(如清醒、睡眠)有关,并受身体活动的影响,尽管迄今为止,尚不清楚与运动相关的哪些成分(如下丘脑-垂体-肾上腺轴激素、细胞因子)参与其中。在这项初步研究中,我们使用极限运动(UltraTriathlon)作为模型来研究身体活动相关的大脑连接变化。我们研究了比赛后清醒和睡眠时的大脑同步,以及运动相关细胞因子/激素与同步特征之间的可能相关性。在清醒状态下,通过fMRI数据(12名运动员)大脑整体连接(GC)来评估全球同步。GC在几个大脑区域增加,主要与感觉-运动活动、情绪调节和应激反应有关,这些区域可能促进跨区域的快速信息交换,并反映了比赛后内部集中的心理活动或从先前的运动项目中脱离。细胞因子/激素与GC无显著相关性。对于睡眠(8名运动员),通过估计与NREM睡眠慢振荡(SSO)现象相关的局部(皮质)和整体(丘脑-皮质)脑电图特征来评估同步。结果表明:大鼠中线区和顶叶区快节奏强度增高;SSOs的振幅和持续时间增加,主要在后部;单点同步上升状态的调制减小。赛跑后,IL-10与快节奏基线、SSO率和正斜率呈正相关;IL-1ra、皮质醇与SSO持续时间呈负相关;TNF-α和c反应蛋白与SSO上升状态下的快节奏调节呈正相关。睡眠结果表明:根据基线快节奏估计,睡眠期间的觉醒会增加;SSO可能由皮质兴奋性维持,与抗炎标志物(IL-10)有关;在炎症标志物较高的运动员中,丘脑-皮质带动功能(sigma调节)受损。
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来源期刊
Archives Italiennes De Biologie
Archives Italiennes De Biologie 医学-神经科学
CiteScore
2.10
自引率
30.00%
发文量
12
审稿时长
>12 weeks
期刊介绍: Archives Italiennes de Biologie - a Journal of Neuroscience- was founded in 1882 and represents one of the oldest neuroscience journals in the world. Archives publishes original contributions in all the fields of neuroscience, including neurophysiology, experimental neuroanatomy and electron microscopy, neurobiology, neurochemistry, molecular biology, genetics, functional brain imaging and behavioral science. Archives Italiennes de Biologie also publishes monographic special issues that collect papers on a specific topic of interest in neuroscience as well as the proceedings of important scientific events. Archives Italiennes de Biologie is published in 4 issues per year and is indexed in the major collections of biomedical journals, including Medline, PubMed, Current Contents, Excerpta Medica.
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