Literature DB >> 23814336

Brain Gray Matter Deficits in Patients with Chronic Primary Insomnia.

Eun Yeon Joo1, Hyun Jin Noh, Jeong-Sik Kim, Dae Lim Koo, Daeyoung Kim, Kyoung Jin Hwang, Ji Young Kim, Sung Tae Kim, Mi Rim Kim, Seung Bong Hong.   

Abstract

STUDY
OBJECTIVE: To investigate the structural changes in patients with chronic primary insomnia and the relationships with clinical features of insomnia.
DESIGN: Statistical parametric mapping 8-based voxel-based morphometry was used to identify differences in regional gray and white matter between patients with chronic primary insomnia and normal controls.
SETTING: University hospital. PATIENTS AND PARTICIPANTS: Twenty-seven patients and 27 age/sex-matched controls.
INTERVENTIONS: Regional differences were compared using two-sample t-tests with age, sex, and intracranial volume as covariates. MEASUREMENTS AND
RESULTS: The patients were a mean age of 52.3 y and had a mean history of insomnia of 7.6 y. Patients displayed cognitive deficits in attention, frontal/executive function, and nonverbal memory. Patients also displayed significantly reduced gray matter concentrations (GMCs) in dorsolateral prefrontal and pericentral cortices, superior temporal gyrus, and cerebellum and decreased gray matter volumes in medial frontal and middle temporal gyri compared with control patients with the cluster threshold ≥ 50 voxels at the level of uncorrected P < 0.001. Negative correlations were found between GMC of the prefrontal cortex and insomnia severity and the wakefulness after sleep onset, and between GMC of pericentral cortex and sleep latencies. None of the findings continued to be significant after correction for multiple comparisons.
CONCLUSIONS: We found gray matter deficits in multiple brain regions including bilateral frontal lobes in patients with psychophysiologic insomnia. Gray matter deficit of the pericentral and lateral temporal areas may be associated with the difficulties in sleep initiation and maintenance. It is still unclear whether gray matter reductions are a preexisting abnormality or a consequence of insomnia. CITATION: Joo EY; Noh HJ; Kim JS; Koo DL; Kim D; Hwang KJ; Kim JY; Kim ST; Kim MR; Hong SB. Brain gray matter deficits in patients with chronic primary insomnia. SLEEP 2013;36(7):999-1007.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Brain; gray matter concentration; insomnia; voxel-based morphometry

Year:  2013        PMID: 23814336      PMCID: PMC3669067          DOI: 10.5665/sleep.2796

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


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