睡眠剥夺和麻木对保加利亚仓鼠脑电图慢波特征的不同影响

V. Vyazovskiy, S. Palchykova, Peter Achermann, I. Tobler, T. Deboer
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引用次数: 15

摘要

先前已有研究表明,在保加利亚仓鼠中,初始脑电图(EEG)慢波活动(0.5 - 4.0 Hz频段的功率;与睡眠剥夺(SD)后的SWA增加相似,在非快速眼动(NREM)睡眠中,每日麻木发作后的SWA持续增强。然而,尚不清楚睡眠后SWA增加的网络机制是否相似。睡眠期间记录在新皮层的脑电图慢波反映了大量神经元群在活动和沉默期间的同步转换。因此,我们开始研究成年雄性保加利亚仓鼠在SD后4小时的非快速眼动睡眠期间和从日常睡眠中醒来后的睡眠期间记录的个体皮质脑电图慢波的特征。我们发现,在SD和麻木后的第一个小时内,SWA的增加与慢波发生率和振幅的增加有关。然而,非快速眼动睡眠的单慢波斜率在SD后的第一个小时更陡,而在麻木后则没有,并且与SD后睡眠相比,麻木后斜率的变化幅度与SWA的变化无关。此外,慢波斜率在SD后的前2小时内逐渐下降,而在麻木后的前2小时内缓慢波斜率明显增加。这些数据表明,长时间的清醒和麻木对慢波特征下的皮层网络活动有不同的影响,但会导致相似的SWA稳态睡眠反应。我们认为睡眠在清醒和昏睡后的网络稳态中都起着重要作用,这与两种状态的恢复功能是一致的。
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Different Effects of Sleep Deprivation and Torpor on EEG Slow-Wave Characteristics in Djungarian Hamsters
Abstract It has been shown previously in Djungarian hamsters that the initial electroencephalography (EEG) slow‐wave activity (power in the 0.5‐4.0 Hz band; SWA) in non‐rapid eye movement (NREM) sleep following an episode of daily torpor is consistently enhanced, similar to the SWA increase after sleep deprivation (SD). However, it is unknown whether the network mechanisms underlying the SWA increase after torpor and SD are similar. EEG slow waves recorded in the neocortex during sleep reflect synchronized transitions between periods of activity and silence among large neuronal populations. We therefore set out to investigate characteristics of individual cortical EEG slow waves recorded during NREM sleep after 4 h SD and during sleep after emergence from an episode of daily torpor in adult male Djungarian hamsters. We found that during the first hour after both SD and torpor, the SWA increase was associated with an increase in slow‐wave incidence and amplitude. However, the slopes of single slow waves during NREM sleep were steeper in the first hour after SD but not after torpor, and, in contrast to sleep after SD, the magnitude of change in slopes after torpor was unrelated to the changes in SWA. Furthermore, slow‐wave slopes decreased progressively within the first 2 h after SD, while a progressive increase in slow‐wave slopes was apparent during the first 2 h after torpor. The data suggest that prolonged waking and torpor have different effects on cortical network activity underlying slow‐wave characteristics, while resulting in a similar homeostatic sleep response of SWA. We suggest that sleep plays an important role in network homeostasis after both waking and torpor, consistent with a recovery function for both states.
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