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An introduction to sleep

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Title: An introduction to sleep


1
An introduction to sleep
Psychobiology NoH 2006
2
What is sleep?
  • We spend a third of our lives asleep
  • Still not clear what it is for!
  • Sleep is defined behaviourally as
  • Reduced motor activity
  • Decreased response to stimulation
  • Stereotypic postures
  • Relatively easy reversibility

3
Characteristics of sleep
  • Sleep is a circadian rhythm, controlled by the
    biological clock
  • We spend 30 of our lives asleep

4
SWS Slow Wave Sleep aka NREM sleep
  • Cerebral blood flow declines to ¼
  • Reduced muscle tone
  • Decreased heart rate, blood pressure, respiration
    and body temperature
  • Gastrointestinal activity might increase

5
REM
  • Blood flow to cerebral cortex similar to when
    awake, brain temperature increased so REM
    shares similarities with the waking state
  • The brain self stimulates with PGO (pontine
    geniculate occiptial) spikes
  • Paralysis of the muscles apart from periodic
    twitches
  • Paradoxical sleep- brain seems awake, but body is
    paralysed
  • Increased heart rate, blood pressure, breathing,
    erections
  • Dreams- often bizarre storylines

6
Methods of Studying sleep
  • EEG (electro encephalogram) - Studies brain wave
    activity, firing of the neurons
  • EMG (electro myogram) - Studies muscle activity
  • EOC (electro oculogram) - Studies eye movement
  • Lesions (animal studies)
  • Insertion of wires into parts of the brain
  • Levels of neurotransmitters in spinal fluid
  • Developmental (over lifespan)
  • Comparative (compare with different animals)

7
  • Electroencephalogram (EEG) wavesStages of sleep

8
Healthy Sleep Cycle
  • Four to five 90 min sleep cycles/night
  • 80SWS, 20REM
  • REM increases gradually from 20 mins to 40 mins
    during the cycles

9
Sleep structure differs across the lifetime
Data from Roffwarg et al., Ontogenetic
development of the human sleep-dream cycle,
Science, 152604-619, 1966, from
http//faculty.washington.edu/chudler/sleep.html
10
How do we fall asleep?
  • Non REM sleep is generated by neurons in the
    basal forebrain and medulla interacting with
    neurons in the midbrain and diencephalon
  • REM sleep is generated by neurons in the caudal
    midbrain and pons interacting with neurons in the
    medulla and forebrain

11
Light/dark information from visual pathways
NB arousal causes wakefulness via activation of
the RF which overrides the hypnogenic centres of
the brain stem
Retina
Pineal gland (secretes melatonin)
Suprachiasmatic nucleus (Part of the hypothalamus)
Regulates REM and SWS
Locus cooeruleus (in the pons, produces
noradrenaline and acetylcholine
Raphe nuclei (lies alongside the RF, produces
serotonin)
Hypnogenic Centres in the Brain stem
12
Circadian rhythms
  • Sleep involves both neural and chemical
    mechanisms
  • Circadian rhythms are regular changes in mental
    and physical characteristics that occur over a
    24hour period. Most circadian rhythms are
    controlled by the suprachiasmatic nucleus
    internal clock (SNC) a tiny set of brain
    structures in the hypothalamus the size of a
    pinhead and containing just 20,000 neurons.
  • Many circadian rhythms have a periodicity of 24
    hours
  • Feeding, foraging, homeostatic regulatory
    mechanisms
  • E.g., regulation of body temperature
  • Endogenous rhythms

13
  • Signals from the SNC travel to several brain
    regions, including the pineal gland, which
    responds to light-induced signals by switching
    off production of the hormone melatonin. The SNC
    also affects functions which are synchronised
    with the sleep/wake cycle, including body
    temperature, hormone secretion and changes in
    blood pressure.

14
What is sleep for
  • Probably different functions for REM, SWS and
    Dreaming.
  • May be more than one function.
  • Certainly, we are in trouble if we dont sleep
    e.g. sleep deprivation psychosis
  • One idea is the temperature regulation hypothesis

15
Temperature regulation hypothesis.
  • Non REM on cells are thermosensitive
  • Is there a functional link with thermoregulatory
    processes? Wehr (1992)
  • Body and brain temperature reduced in NREM
  • Heating hypothalamus induces sleep in animals
  • Cooling the hypothalamus induces wakefulness
  • Fevers lead to more SWS
  • Heating body prior to sleep increases SWS in
    humans
  • Rats deprived of sleep show increases of 10
    degrees in preferred ambient temperatures

16
More evidence for thermoregulation
  • Hibernation entered from NREM
  • shallow torpor from NREM
  • During NREM core temp drops, REM starts at lowest
    temperature and warms core
  • REM is only in warm blooded

17
Further thermoregulation evidence
  • Environment cold, and cold whilst in SWS, so
    blood flowing to hypothalamus is cold, which
    triggers REM
  • If too cold ? wake up
  • Behavioural warmers are off in REM, other factors
    warm CNS core
  • At birth core body temperature is low and REM is
    high, often go straight into REM

18
Amount of sleep Can you think of reasons for
this???
19
Evolutionary
  • Need for and difficulty of finding food
  • Need for a safe sleeping place
  • Risk of predation

20
Restorative
  • Memory consolidation REM, Empson and Clarke
    (1970), Jouvet (1978).
  • Cognitive problem solving REM, SWS and dreaming
    may all have slightly different functions and
    contributions. Greenberg et al. (1972) -
  • Repair SWS physical, REM brain and
    neurotransmitters

21
Stimulation
  • REM sleep could be a way of making sure the brain
    doesnt shut down completely during sleep
    Vertes and Eastman (2000).
  • Prepares the brain for waking
  • Allows the brain to periodically sample the
    environment for danger

22
Do we all dream?
  • Almost all animals have REM sleep and dreaming
  • Stage 2 sleep is also associated with dreaming,
    however dreams during this stage are more
    concerned with thinking through problems -
    Kekule.

23
Why do we Dream?
  • Freud
  • Activation synthesis hypothesis Hobson and
    McCarley
  • Reverse Learning theory Crick and Mitchison
    (1983)
  • Memory consolidation hypothesis

24
REM deprivation and rebounds
  • Increases in daytime sleepiness
  • REM rebound after suppression
  • But not the total amount
  • Antidepressants
  • suppress REM

25
An overview of similarities and differences
between wakefulness and REM
  • REM and waking state have similar EEG patterns
  • Both exhibit mental activity
  • Both exhibit a level of sensory processing
  • There are different inputs to the system
  • Some differences in neural substrates

26
EEG in REM and Waking state
  • Desynchronised, low voltage, fast activity EEG
  • Hippocampal EEG is highly synchronised
  • EEG gamma activity
  • Associated with consciousness and waking states
  • Attention and vigilance
  • Also in REM but not SWS

27
Sleep disorders
  • Sleep disorders include problems with falling or
    staying asleep, falling asleep at inappropriate
    times, problems with adhering to a regular
    sleeping schedule and sleep disruptive behaviours

28
Some sleep disorders
  • Insomnia
  • Obstructive sleep apnoea
  • Narcolepsy http//www.devilducky.com/media/8232/
  • Sleep walking and talking
  • REM sleep behaviour disorder
  • Like Jouvets cats
  • Sleep paralysis
  • Night terrors

29
Summary
  • REM and NREM sleep are different states
  • Sleep (particularly NREM) is related to
    thermoregulation
  • Sleep is also important for restoration and
    repair
  • REM is similar to wakefulness and is related to
    stimulation of the cortex and CNS preparation for
    a potential fight, flight response
  • Sleep probably has many functions
  • Much of the same evidence is used to support all
    theories
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