Sleep dynamics in severe brian injury, and mechanisms of alpha-delta sleep
Daytime central thalamic deep brain stimulation modulates sleep dynamics in the severely injured brain:
Mechanistic insights and novel framework for alpha-delta sleep generation
Jackie L. Gottshall, Zoe M. Adams, Peter B. Forgacs and Nicholas D. Schiff
Frontiers in Neurology 10, doi: 10.3389/fneur.2019.00020 (2019)
Abstract
Loss of organized sleep electrophysiology is a characteristic finding following severe
brain injury. The return of structured elements of sleep architecture has been associated
with positive prognosis across injury etiologies, suggesting a role for sleep dynamics
as biomarkers of wakeful neuronal circuit function. In a continuing study of one
minimally conscious state patient studied over the course of 8.5 years, we sought to
investigate whether changes in daytime brain activation induced by central thalamic deep
brain stimulation (CT-DBS) influenced sleep electrophysiology. In this patient subject,
we previously reported significant improvements in sleep electrophysiology during 5.5
years of CT-DBS treatment, including increased sleep spindle frequency and SWS
delta power. We now present novel findings that many of these improvements in
sleep electrophysiology regress following CT-DBS discontinuation; these regressions
in sleep features correlate with a significant decrease in behavioral responsiveness.
We also observe the re-emergence of alpha-delta sleep, which had been previously
suppressed by daytime CT-DBS in this patient subject. Importantly, CT-DBS was only
active during the daytime and has been proposed to mediate recovery of consciousness
by driving synaptic activity across frontostriatal systems through the enhancement of
thalamocortical output. Accordingly, the improvement of sleep dynamics during daytime
CT-DBS and their subsequent regression following CT-DBS discontinuation implicates
wakeful synaptic activity as a robust modulator of sleep electrophysiology. We interpret
these findings in the context of the "synaptic homeostasis hypothesis," whereby we
propose that daytime upregulation of thalamocortical output in the severely injured brain
may facilitate organized frontocortical circuit activation and yield net synaptic potentiation
during wakefulness, providing a homeostatic drive that reconstitutes sleep dynamics
over time. Furthermore, we consider common large-scale network dynamics across
several neuropsychiatric disorders in which alpha-delta sleep has been documented,
allowing us to formulate a novel mechanistic framework for alpha-delta sleep generation.
We conclude that the bi-directional modulation of sleep electrophysiology by daytime thalamocortical activity in the severely injured brain: (1) emphasizes the cyclical carry-over
effects of state-dependent circuit activation on large-scale brain dynamics, and (2) further
implicates sleep electrophysiology as a sensitive indicator of wakeful brain activation and
covert functional recovery in the severely injured brain.
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