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Query: UMLS:C0011570 (
depression
)
172,036
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Sleep and respiration data from two French medical high altitude expeditions (Annapurna 4,800 m and Mt Sajama 6,542 m) are presented. Difficulties in maintaining sleep and a
SWS
decrease were found with periodic breathing (PB) during both non-REM and REM sleep. Extent of PB varied considerably among subjects and was not correlated to the number of arousals but to the intercurrent wakefulness duration. There was a positive correlation between the time spent in PB and the individual hypoxic ventilatory drive. The relation between PB, nocturnal desaturation, and mountain sickness intensity are discussed. Acclimatization decreased the latency toward PB and improved sleep. Hypnotic benzodiazepine intake (loprazolam 1 mg) did not worsen either
SWS
depression
or apneas and allowed normal sleep reappearance after acclimatization.
...
PMID:Sleep apneas and high altitude newcomers. 148 84
During the clinical latency phase of human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) disease the central nervous system may be infected and begin to manifest subtle dysfunction. Our early investigations demonstrated persistent alterations in the sleep architecture of HIV-infected asymptomatic men. The major aims of this study were to delineate alterations of sleep architecture in asymptomatic HIV-infected men, to identify and describe sleep behavior complaints and to seek a correlation between objective sleep parameters and subjective complaints of sleep behavior. The study sample consisted of 24 men, 14 HIV-infected and 10 HIV-negative, age-matched controls. The protocol included a comprehensive history and physical, two polysomnograms, urine toxicity, detailed written sleep questionnaire, the Pittsburgh Sleep Quality Index, the Spielberger State-Trait Anxiety Test and the Beck
Depression
Inventory. Our results indicated that sleep architecture differed from controls in that wakefulness, slow-wave sleep [
SWS
-stage 3 and 4 nonrapid eye movement (NREM) sleep] and stage rapid eye movement (REM) sleep were more evenly dispersed throughout the night. In particular,
SWS
was prevalent during the second half of recorded sleep. The observed changes in the NREM/REM cycle could not be explained on the basis of underlying psychopathology. Just as the course of individuals with HIV infection varies, it is expected that sleep abnormalities will vary. Considering the known relationships between NREM stage 3 and 4 and immune system function, it is possible that the observed alterations in the NREM/REM cycle are related to coincident changes in immunologic function. Quantitative measures of NREM sleep, especially
SWS
and REM sleep, are perhaps of greater significance than relative measures of sleep stages.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Sleep disturbances in men with asymptomatic human immunodeficiency (HIV) infection. 157 89
In rats with the persistent alcohol motivation the electrophysiological sleep pattern was studied during ethanol intake, after 24 and 48 hours of alcohol withdrawal. It was established that during the voluntary ethanol intake rats may be divided into two groups: with comparative deficit (1st group) and comparative abundance (2nd group) of REM sleep. Alcohol withdrawal caused differential alterations of sleep-wakefulness cycle: in the 1st group of rats REM sleep was more suppressed while in the 2nd group--more increased in comparison to those during ethanol intake. In all animals the
SWS
depression
, increase of awakenings, the aggravation of falling asleep and decrease of sleep depth were observed. DSIP (0.1 mg/kg, i.p. 1 hour before sleep recording) was found to regulate sleep disorders caused by ethanol withdrawal. It makes the neuropeptide possible to be recommended for ethanol withdrawal syndrome treatment in clinical practice.
...
PMID:[Effects of delta sleep-inducing peptide on electrophysiological parameters of sleep during alcohol withdrawal in rats]. 226 15
Sleep in
depression
is characterized by an increase in the number and duration of awakenings, sleep instability, and
SWS
decrease. REM sleep occurs earlier. REMs density during the 1st REM period is higher than in normal controls matched in age. Accordingly, sleep in
depression
is similar to sleep in normal aging. Endogenous depression cannot be distinguished from other types of
depression
by means of polygraphic criteria. Sleep recordings at the beginning of tricyclic compound treatment could be predictive of clinical response to treatment. Sleep modifications induced by antidepressive drugs are reviewed. Sleep recordings enabled us to formulate several physiopathological hypotheses of
depression
mechanisms: cholinergic-aminergic hypothesis, phase advance, deficiency of process S. Other hypotheses are reviewed: flattening of a hypothetical circadian rhythm of arousal, depressogenic property of sleep in itself (or only of
SWS
) or timing delay for the start of sleep. A significant phase advance of biological rhythms (temperature, cortisol) is rarely found. A reduction in the amplitude of rhythms (temperature, TSH, melatonine) is more frequent.
...
PMID:[Sleep and biological rhythms in depression. Changes caused by antidepressants]. 812 20
The effect of repeated Na-penicillin (PCN) microinjections in the temporal lobe amygdala (AM) of free-moving cats was investigated in order to establish if kindling epileptogenesis is possible with this procedure. The cortical propagation of the PCN-induced post-discharge in AM and the sequence of behavioral changes induced by PCN were similar to those of AM electrical kindling. Nevertheless, the epileptogenic effect of PCN had a different evolution from that of electrical kindling, since some PCN habituation was observed after several doses. Repeated microinjections of PCN did not produce lasting alterations in sleep onset and organization. The only mild changes recorded in the 23 h following PCN microinjections were an increased latency of the first rapid eye movement (REM) sleep episode, a
SWS
II total time and percentage increase, and, with the highest PCN doses, a not very significant diminution of REM sleep total time. Another finding was the occurrence of REM sleep ponto-geniculo-occipital (PGO) waves, coinciding with a
depression
of the frequency and amplitude of interictal amygdaloid and cortical spikes. The results showed that a microinjection of PCN in the AM produced a reliable model of interictal spikes, paroxysms and generalized convulsive seizures. Nevertheless, long lasting kindling effect was not observed.
...
PMID:Repeated penicillin-induced amygdala epileptic focus in freely moving cats. EEG, polysomnographic (23-h recording), and brain mapping study. 877 99
The neuropeptides growth hormone-releasing hormone (GHRH) and corticotropin-releasing hormone (CRH) play a key role in sleep endocrine regulation. After pulsatile application of GHRH during the first few hours of the night in young normal controls
SWS
and GH increase, whereas cortisol is blunted. CRH however prompts inverse effects. The balance between these peptides is changed in favour of CRH physiologically during the second time of the night, during the acute episode of
depression
(due to overactivity of GRH) and in the elderly (due to reduced activity of CHRH). These changes explain the aberrances of sleep endocrine activity in these states, as shallow sleep, low GH and enhanced cortisol.
...
PMID:[The role of neuropeptides in normal and disordered sleep regulation]. 901 57
Utilizing polysomnography (PSG) and psychometry, objective and subjective sleep and awakening quality was investigated in 11 drug-free patients (five females, six males) aged 35-75 years (mean age 54.1 +/- 11.4) suffering from nonorganic insomnia (F 51.0) related to a depressive episode (F 32) or recurrent depressive disorder (F 33). as compared with 11 age- and sex-matched normal controls (five females, six males) aged 36-75 years (mean age 53.0 +/- 13.5). PSG demonstrated decreased sleep efficiency, total sleep time (TST), total sleep period (TSP) and sleep stage S2, as well as increased wakefulness during TSP, early morning awakening, sleep latency to S1, S2, S3 and sleep stage S1 in depressed patients. Subjective sleep quality and the total score of the Self-Assessment of Sleep and Awakening Quality Scale (SSA) were deteriorated as were morning and evening well being, drive, mood and fine motor activity right. Evening and morning blood pressure, the O2 desaturation index and periodic leg movement (PLM) index were increased. In a subsequent acute, placebo-controlled cross-over design study, the acute effects of 100 mg of trazodone, a serotonin reuptake inhibitor with a sedative action due to 5-HT2 and alpha1 receptor blockade, were investigated in the patients. As compared with placebo, trazodone induced an increase in sleep efficiency (primary target variable), TST, TSP and
SWS
(S3 + S4), as well as a decrease in wakefulness during the TSP, early morning awakening and S2. There was no change in rapid eye movement (REM) sleep with the exception of an increase in the REM duration in minutes. Trazodone also caused an improvement in subjective sleep quality, affectivity, numerical memory and somatic complaints. All respiratory variables remained within normal limits. Critical flicker frequency and moming diastolic blood pressure were decreased. The present study demonstrated that
depression
induced significant changes in objective and subjective sleep and awakening quality, which were counteracted by 100 mg of trazodone, thus suggesting a key-lock principle in the treatment of
depression
.
...
PMID:Insomnia in depression: differences in objective and subjective sleep and awakening quality to normal controls and acute effects of trazodone. 1181 1
Parallel effects of a single injection of the 5-HT(2) receptor antagonist ritanserin on EEG power spectra, sleep and motor activity were measured for a 20-h period in freely moving Sprague-Dawley rats. Ritanserin (0.3 mg/kg, i.p.), administered at light onset (passive phase), caused an immediate transient increase in the EEG power density in the low frequency range (0.25-6 Hz, mainly delta activity) and a
depression
in the high frequency range (27-30 Hz) accompanied by a decrease in vigilance and light slow wave sleep (
SWS
-1), intermediate stage of sleep and increase in deep slow wave sleep (
SWS
-2) compared to control treatment. All these effects were over 8 h after the injection. Twelve hours after the injection, at dark onset (active phase), there was a marked increase in vigilance and motor activity and decrease in
SWS
-1 and spindle frequency activity in the control animals, but all these changes were diminished by ritanserin treatment. These effects resulted in a significant relative increase in the intermediate band (peak: 12-15 Hz) of the EEG power spectra and thus, a relative increase in thalamo-cortical synchronization caused by ritanserin at dark onset. Because ritanserin is a selective 5-HT(2) receptor antagonist, we conclude that under physiological conditions serotonin increases EEG desynchronization and produces an increase in vigilance level and motor activity by tonic activation of 5-HT(2) receptors. This regulatory mechanism plays an important role in the waking process, and the appearances of its effects in the light and dark phase are markedly different.
...
PMID:Acute and long-term effects of the 5-HT2 receptor antagonist ritanserin on EEG power spectra, motor activity, and sleep: changes at the light-dark phase shift. 1208 44
A bidirectional interaction exists between sleep electroencephalogram (EEG) and endocrine activity in various species including humans. Various hormones (peptides, steroids) were shown to participate in sleep regulation. A keyrole was shown for the reciprocal interaction between sleep-promoting growth hormone-releasing hormone (GHRH) and sleep-impairing corticotropin-releasing hormone (CRH). Changes in the GHRH:CRH ratio result in changes of sleep-endocrine activity. There is good evidence that the change of this ratio in favor of CRH contributes to aberrances of sleep during aging and
depression
. Besides of GHRH ghrelin and galanin promote
SWS
, whereas somatostatin is another sleep-impairing factor. NPY acts as a CRH antagonist and induces sleep onset. Prolactin enhances rapid eve-movement sleep (REMS) in rats.
SWS
is enhanced in patients with prolactinoma. Other studies on the influence of prolactin of human sleep are lacking. There is a controversy whether CRH promotes REMS. In humans vasocactive intestinal polypeptide (VIP) appears to play a role in the temporal organization of sleep, since after VIP administration the NREMS-REMS cycle decelerated. Several neuroactive steroids (pregnenolone, progesterone, allopregnanolone, dehydroepiandrosterone) exert specific effects on sleep EEG via GABAA receptors. Cortisol appears to enhance REMS. Finally gonadal hormones participate in sleep regulation. Estrogen replacement therapy and CRH-1 receptor antagonism in
depression
are beneficial clinical applications of the basic research presented here.
...
PMID:Sleep and endocrine regulation. 1270 62
Depression
in humans is associated with sleep abnormalities of three types: altered rapid eye movement (REM) sleep, fragmented sleep, and reduced delta sleep. In an animal model of
depression
, chronic exposure to mild stressors (CMS, e.g. periods of soiled cage, reversed light/dark cycle, grouped housing, food and/or water deprivation) causes behavioral and hormonal changes which, in humans, often are associated with
depression
. In the CMS model, a reduced sucrose intake has been defined as one of the core symptoms of
depression
, anhedonia, although this finding is not consistent among various laboratories. In the present study, we investigated if the CMS procedure, in our laboratory, would cause decreased sucrose intake and, also, give sleep changes similar to what is found in depressed patients. Exposure to CMS decreased sucrose intake in our rats. The largest effect was obtained after 2 weeks of the stress protocol. CMS rats spent more time in REM sleep and showed more fragmented sleep compared to their baseline recording, while there were no changes in the control rats. Increased sleep fragmentation in CMS rats was particularly evident by increased number of arousals, and increased REM sleep and slow-wave-sleep-1 (SWS-1) episodes. The duration of sleep stage episodes was decreased. The amount of slow-wave-sleep-2 (SWS-2) was not decreased, however
SWS
-2 in percent of total
SWS
was reduced. Correlation analysis showed that animals that had less consumption of sucrose spent more time in REM sleep and had increased number of REM sleep episodes. In this study, CMS appears to be a model of
depression
.
...
PMID:Chronic mild stress affects sucrose intake and sleep in rats. 1503 87
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