| Literature DB >> 34499294 |
Yan Shao1, Guangyuan Zou2,3, Serik Tabarak4, Jie Chen1, Xuejiao Gao1, Ping Yao5, Jiayi Liu2,3, Yuezhen Li1,6, Nana Xiong1, Wen Pan7, Mengying Ma1, Shuqin Zhou3, Jing Xu3, Yundong Ma1, Jiahui Deng1, Qiqing Sun1, Yanping Bao8, Wei Sun1, Jie Shi8, Qihong Zou9,10, Jia-Hong Gao11,12,13, Hongqiang Sun14.
Abstract
Sleep spindles have been implicated in sleep protection, depression and anxiety. However, spindle-related brain imaging mechanism underpinning the deficient sleep protection and emotional regulation in insomnia disorder (ID) remains elusive. The aim of the current study is to investigate the relationship between spindle-related brain activations and sleep quality, symptoms of depression and anxiety in patients with ID. Participants (n = 46, 28 females, 18-60 years) were recruited through advertisements including 16 with ID, according to the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, Fifth Edition, and 30 matched controls. Group differences in spindle-related brain activations were analyzed using multimodality data acquired with simultaneous electroencephalography and functional magnetic resonance imaging during sleep. Compared with controls, patients with ID showed significantly decreased bilateral spindle-related brain activations in the cingulate gyrus (familywise error corrected p ˂ 0.05, cluster size 4401 mm3). Activations in the cingulate gyrus were negatively correlated with Pittsburgh Sleep Quality Index scores (r = -0.404, p = 0.005) and Self-Rating Anxiety Scale scores (r = -0.364, p = 0.013), in the pooled sample. These findings underscore the key role of spindle-related brain activations in the cingulate gyrus in subjective sleep quality and emotional regulation in ID.Entities:
Keywords: BOLD; EEG-fMRI; Insomnia disorder; Sleep quality; Sleep spindles
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34499294 DOI: 10.1007/s11682-021-00544-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Brain Imaging Behav ISSN: 1931-7557 Impact factor: 3.978