4.5 Article

Validation of PiezoSleep Scoring Against EEG/EMG Sleep Scoring in Rats

Journal

NATURE AND SCIENCE OF SLEEP
Volume 14, Issue -, Pages 1877-1886

Publisher

DOVE MEDICAL PRESS LTD
DOI: 10.2147/NSS.S381367

Keywords

piezoelectric; noninvasive sleep scoring; telemetry; automated sleep scoring; EEG; EMG; rat

Funding

  1. University of Illinois Chicago?s Center for Sleep and Health Research Equipment Research Fund
  2. National Institutes of Health
  3. [NINR R00NR014369]

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This study validates the feasibility of a new sleep measurement method, PiezoSleep, in rats. PiezoSleep uses a piezoelectric film transducer to detect movement and respiration and employs an algorithm to automatically score sleep. It has been shown to be consistent with EEG/EMG-guided scoring in rats.
Introduction: Current methods of sleep research in rodents involve invasive surgical procedures of EEG and EMG electrodes implantation. Recently, a new method of measuring sleep, PiezoSleep, has been validated against implanted electrodes in mice and rats. PiezoSleep uses a piezoelectric film transducer to detect the rodent's movements and respiration and employs an algorithm to automatically score sleep. Here, we validate PiezoSleep scoring versus EEG/EMG implanted electrodes sleep scoring in rats.Methods: Adult male Brown Norway and Wistar Kyoto rats were implanted with bilateral stainless-steel screws into the skull for EEG recording and bilateral wire electrodes into the nuchal muscles for EMG assessment. In Brown Norway rats, the EEG/EMG electrode leads were soldered to a miniature connector plug and fixed to the skull. In Wistar Kyoto rats, the EEG/EMG leads were tunneled subcutaneously to a telemetry transmitter implanted in the flank. Rats were allowed to recover from surgery for one week. Brown Norway rats were placed in PiezoSleep cages, and had their headsets connected to cable for recording EEG/EMG signals, which were then manually scored by a human scorer in 10-sec epochs. Wistar Kyoto rats were placed in PiezoSleep cages, and EEG/ EMG signals were recorded using a telemetry system (DSI). Sleep was scored automatically in 4-sec epochs using NeuroScore software. PiezoSleep software recorded and scored sleep in the rats.Results: Rats implanted with corded EEG/EMG headsets had 85.6% concurrence of sleep-wake scoring with PiezoSleep. Rats implanted with EEG/EMG telemetry had 80.8% concurrence sleep-wake scoring with PiezoSleep. Sensitivity and specificity rates were similar between the EEG/EMG recording systems. Total sleep time and hourly sleep times did not differ in all three systems. However, automatic sleep detection by NeuroScore classified more sleep during the light period compared to the PiezoSleep.Conclusion: We showed that PiezoSleep system can be a reliable alternative to both automatic and visual EEG/EMG-based sleep -wake scoring in rat.

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