4.6 Article

Sleep architecture and sleep-disordered breathing in fatal insomnia

Journal

SLEEP MEDICINE
Volume 100, Issue -, Pages 311-346

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.sleep.2022.08.027

Keywords

Fatal insomnia; Fatal familial insomnia; Central sleep apnea; Respiratory rate variability; Stridor; REM sleep Without atonia; Neuropathology; Prion diseases; Catathrenia; Undifferentiated NREM sleep

Funding

  1. [PI20/0448]

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The study revealed that FI patients exhibit frequent breathing alterations, including various breathing disturbances, distorted NREM sleep, and severely impaired REM sleep. Brainstem impairment plays a crucial role in FI.
Study objectives: Fatal insomnia (FI) is a rare prion disease severely affecting sleep architecture. Breathing during sleep has not been systematically assessed. Our aim was to characterize the sleep architecture, respiratory patterns, and neuropathologic findings in FI. Methods: Eleven consecutive FI patients (ten familial, one sporadic) were examined with videopolysomnography (vPSG) between 2002 and 2017. Wake/sleep stages and respiration were evaluated using a modified scoring system. Postmortem neuropathology was assessed in seven patients. Results: Median age at onset was 48 years and survival after vPSG was 1 year. All patients had different combinations of breathing disturbances including increased respiratory rate variability (RRV; n = 7), stridor (n = 9), central sleep apnea (CSA) (n = 5), hiccup (n = 6), catathrenia (n = 7), and other expiratory sounds (n = 10). RRV in NREM sleep correlated with ambiguous and solitary nuclei degeneration (r = 0.9, p = 0.008) and reduced survival (r = -0.7, p = 0.037). Two new stages, Subwake1 and Subwake2, present in all patients, were characterized. NREM sleep (conventional or undifferentiated) was identifiable in ten patients but reduced in duration in eight. REM sleep occurred in short segments in nine patients, and their reduced duration correlated with medullary raphe nuclei degeneration (r = -0.9, p = 0.005). Seven patients had REM without atonia. Three vPSG patterns were identified: agitated, with aperiodic, manipulative, and finalistic movements (n = 4); quiet-apneic, with CSA (n = 4); and quiet-non-apneic (n = 3). Conclusions: FI patients show frequent breathing alterations, associated with respiratory nuclei damage, and, in addition to NREM sleep distortion, have severe impairment of REM sleep, related with raphe nuclei degeneration. Brainstem impairment is crucial in FI. (c) 2022 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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