Variation of electroencephalographic activity during non-rapid eye movement and rapid eye movement sleep with phase of circadian melatonin rhythm in humans
1. The circadian pacemaker regulates the timing, structure and consolidation of human sleep. The extent to which this pacemaker affects electroencephalographic (EEG) activity during sleep remains unclear. 2. To investigate this, a total of 1.22 million power spectra were computed from EEGs recorded...
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Veröffentlicht in: | The Journal of physiology 1997-12, Vol.505 (Pt 3), p.851-858 |
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Zusammenfassung: | 1. The circadian pacemaker regulates the timing, structure and consolidation of human sleep. The extent to which this pacemaker
affects electroencephalographic (EEG) activity during sleep remains unclear. 2. To investigate this, a total of 1.22 million
power spectra were computed from EEGs recorded in seven men (total, 146 sleep episodes; 9 h 20 min each) who participated
in a one-month-long protocol in which the sleep-wake cycle was desynchronized from the rhythm of plasma melatonin, which is
driven by the circadian pacemaker. 3. In rapid eye movement (REM) sleep a small circadian variation in EEG activity was observed.
The nadir of the circadian rhythm of alpha activity (8.25-10.5 Hz) coincided with the end of the interval during which plasma
melatonin values were high, i.e. close to the crest of the REM sleep rhythm. 4. In non-REM sleep, variation in EEG activity
between 0.25 and 11.5 Hz was primarily dependent on prior sleep time and only slightly affected by circadian phase, such that
the lowest values coincided with the phase of melatonin secretion. 5. In the frequency range of sleep spindles, high-amplitude
circadian rhythms with opposite phase positions relative to the melatonin rhythm were observed. Low-frequency sleep spindle
activity (12.25-13.0 Hz) reached its crest and high-frequency sleep spindle activity (14.25-15.5 Hz) reached its nadir when
sleep coincided with the phase of melatonin secretion. 6. These data indicate that the circadian pacemaker induces changes
in EEG activity during REM and non-REM sleep. The changes in non-REM sleep EEG spectra are dissimilar from the spectral changes
induced by sleep deprivation and exhibit a close temporal association with the melatonin rhythm and the endogenous circadian
phase of sleep consolidation. |
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ISSN: | 0022-3751 1469-7793 |
DOI: | 10.1111/j.1469-7793.1997.851ba.x |