首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
     


Chronic stress during paradoxical sleep deprivation increases paradoxical sleep rebound: association with prolactin plasma levels and brain serotonin content
Authors:Machado Ricardo Borges  Tufik Sergio  Suchecki Deborah
Affiliation:Department of Psychobiology, Universidade Federal de São Paulo, São Paulo, Brazil
Abstract:Previous studies suggest that stress associated to sleep deprivation methods can affect the expression of sleep rebound. In order to examine this association and possible mechanisms, rats were exposed to footshock stress during or immediately after a 96-h period of paradoxical sleep deprivation (PSD) and their sleep and heart rate were recorded. Control rats (maintained in individual home cages) and paradoxical sleep-deprived (PS-deprived) rats were distributed in three conditions (1) no footshock - NF; (2) single footshock - SFS: one single footshock session at the end of the PSD period (6-8 shocks per minute; 100ms; 2mA; for 40min); and (3) multiple footshock - MFS: footshock sessions with the same characteristics as described above, twice a day throughout PSD (at 7:00h and 19:00h) and one extra session before the recovery period. After PSD, animals were allowed to sleep freely for 72h. Additional groups were sacrificed at the end of the sleep deprivation period for blood sampling (ACTH, corticosterone, prolactin and catecholamine levels) and brain harvesting (monoamines and metabolites). Neither SFS nor MFS produced significant alterations in the sleep patterns of control rats. All PS-deprived groups exhibited increased heart rate which could be explained by increased dopaminergic activity in the medulla. As expected, PS deprivation induced rebound of paradoxical sleep in the first day of recovery; however, PSD+MFS group showed the highest rebound (327.3% above the baseline). This group also showed intermediate levels of corticosterone and the highest levels of prolactin, which were positively correlated with the length of PS episodes. Moreover, paradoxical sleep deprivation resulted in elevation of the serotonergic turnover in the hypothalamus, which partly explained the hormonal results, and in the hippocampus, which appears to be related to adaptive responses to stress. The data are discussed in the realm of a prospective importance of paradoxical sleep for processing of traumatic events.
Keywords:Paradoxical sleep deprivation   Footshock stress   Sleep homeostasis   Heart rate   Prolactin   Corticosterone   Dopamine   Serotonin
本文献已被 ScienceDirect PubMed 等数据库收录!
设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号