4.6 Article

Further evidences for sleep instability and impaired spindle-delta dynamics in schizophrenia: a whole-night polysomnography study with neuroloop-gain and sleep-cycle analysis

Journal

SLEEP MEDICINE
Volume 38, Issue -, Pages 1-13

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV
DOI: 10.1016/j.sleep.2017.02.009

Keywords

Schizophrenia; NREM sleep; REM sleep; Sleep stage transitions; Neuroloop-gain; Spindle-delta dynamics

Funding

  1. NIMHANS administration
  2. Indian Council for Medical Research (ICMR), Government of India [3/1/3/37/Neuro/2013-NCD-I]
  3. Department of Biotechnology (DBT), Government of India [BT/PR/8363/MED/14/1252]

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Objective: Sleep offers a unique window into the brain dysfunctions in schizophrenia. Many past sleep studies have reported abnormalities in both macro-sleep architecture (like increased awakenings) as well as micro-sleep-architecture (like spindle deficits) in patients with schizophrenia (PSZ). The present study attempts to replicate previous reports of macro- and micro-sleep-architectural abnormalities in schizophrenia. In addition, the study also examined sleep-stage changes and spindle-delta dynamics across sleep-cycles to provide further evidence in support of the dysfunctional thalamocortical mechanisms causing sleep instability and poor sleep maintenance associated with schizophrenia pathophysiology. Methods: Whole-night polysomnography was carried out among 45 PSZ and 39 age- and gender-matched healthy control subjects. Sleep-stage dynamics were assessed across sleep-cycles using a customized software algorithm. Spindle-delta dynamics across sleep-cycles were determined using neuroloop-gain analysis. Results: PSZ showed macro-sleep architecture abnormalities such as prolonged sleeplessness, increased intermittent-awakenings, long sleep-onset latency, reduced non-rapid eye movement (NREM) stage 2 sleep, increased stage transitions, and poor sleep efficiency. They also showed reduced spindle density (sigma neuroloop-gain) but comparable slow wave density (delta neuroloop-gain) throughout the sleep. Sleep-cycle-wise analysis revealed transient features of sleep instability due to significantly increased intermittent awakenings especially in the first and third sleep-cycles, and unstable and recurrent stage transitions in both NREM (first sleep-cycle) and rapid eye movement (REM) sleep-periods (second sleep-cycle). Spindle deficits were persistent across the first three cycles and were positively correlated with sleep disruption during the subsequent REM sleep. Conclusions: In addition to replicating previously reported sleep deficits in PSZ, the current study showed subtle deficits in NREM-REM alterations across whole-night polysomnography. These results point towards a possible maladaptive interplay between unstable thalamocortical networks, resulting in sleep-cycle-specific instability patterns associated with schizophrenia pathophysiology. (C) 2017 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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