Literature DB >> 18457237

Long-term effect of cued fear conditioning on REM sleep microarchitecture in rats.

Vibha Madan1, Francis X Brennan, Graziella L Mann, Apryle A Horbal, Gregory A Dunn, Richard J Ross, Adrian R Morrison.   

Abstract

STUDY
OBJECTIVES: To study long-term effects of conditioned fear on REM sleep (REMS) parameters in albino rats.
DESIGN: We have investigated disturbances in sleep architecture, including muscle twitch density as REMS phasic activity, and freezing behavior in wakefulness, upon reexposure to a conditioned stimulus (CS) on Day 1 and Day 14 postconditioning.
SUBJECTS: Male Sprague-Dawley rats prepared for polysomnographic recordings.
INTERVENTIONS: After baseline sleep recording, the animals in the experimental group received five pairings of a 5-sec tone, co-terminating with a 1-sec, 1 mAfootshock. The control rats received similar numbers of tones and shocks, but explicitly unpaired. On postconditioning days, after reexposure to tones alone, sleep and freezing behavior were recorded. MEASUREMENTS AND
RESULTS: Conditioned fear significantly altered REMS microarchitecture (characterized as sequential-REMS [seq-REMS: < or =3 min episode separation] and single-REMS [sin-REMS: >3 min episode separation]) on Day 14. The total amount and number of seq-REMS episodes decreased, while the total amount and number of sin-REMS episodes increased. Further, the CS induced significant increases in freezing and REMS myoclonic twitch density in the experimental group. Reexposure to the CS produced no alterations in controls.
CONCLUSIONS: The results suggest that conditioned fear causes REMS alterations, including difficulty in initiating a REMS episode as indicated by the diminution in the number of seq-REMS episodes. Another finding, the increase in phasic activity, agrees with the inference from clinical investigations that retrieval of fearful memories can be associated with the long-term REMS disturbances characteristic of posttraumatic stress disorder.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  2008        PMID: 18457237      PMCID: PMC2279752          DOI: 10.1093/sleep/31.4.497

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Sleep        ISSN: 0161-8105            Impact factor:   5.849


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