Neurobehavioral consequences of arousals

被引:72
作者
Chugh, DK
Weaver, TE
Dinges, DE
机构
[1] UNIV PENN,SCH MED,DEPT PSYCHIAT,UNIT EXPT PSYCHIAT,DIV SLEEP & CHRONOBIOL,PHILADELPHIA,PA 19104
[2] UNIV PENN,SCH MED,DEPT PSYCHIAT,CTR SLEEP & RESP NEUROBIOL,PHILADELPHIA,PA 19104
[3] UNIV PENN,SCH NURSING,PHILADELPHIA,PA 19104
关键词
apnea; arousals; neurobehavioral deficits; sleep fragmentation; sleep homeostasis; sleepiness;
D O I
10.1093/sleep/19.suppl_10.S198
中图分类号
R74 [神经病学与精神病学];
学科分类号
摘要
The neurobehavioral deficits of obstructive sleep apnea syndrome (OSAS) are often attributed to the rate of respiratory disturbance or rate of arousals during sleep. However. sleep disordered breathing is also associated with other changes in sleep infrastructure that may account for cumulative waking deficits. This was illustrated in polysomnographic data from 1,521 patients with OSAS where increasing arousal indices were associated with increased duration of stage 1 sleep and concomitant reduction in total sleep time. Similar results have been found in paradigms in which sleep was experimentally fragmented in healthy individuals. It appears that chronic fragmentation of sleep, whether by apneas or acoustic stimuli, leads to cumulative homeostatic pressure for sleep. which may explain a number of phenomenan characteristic of both untreated OSAS patients and experimentally fragmented sleepers: (1) increased arousal threshold, (2) rapid return to sleep after arousal, (3) fewer awakenings over time, (4) increased sleep inertia on awakenings, (5) increased amnesia for arousals, and (6) daytime sleepiness. Elevated homeostatic drive for sleep appears to be a function of both the frequency of arousals within a night and the chronicity of sleep fragmentation across nights, neither of which have been adequately modeled in experimental studies of healthy subjects.
引用
收藏
页码:S198 / S201
页数:4
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