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| Title: | Quantitative EEG amplitude across REM sleep |
| Authors: | Liscombe, Marcus Hoffmann, Robert Trivedi, Madhukar Parker, Marc Rush, John Armitage, Roseanne |
| Keywords: | depressive disorder REM sleep |
| Issue Date: | 2002 |
| Citation: | Journal of Psychiatry and Neuroscience, 2002, 27(1), 40-46 <http://hdl.handle.net/2027.42/60182> |
| Abstract: | Objective: To determine if there are significant differences in the temporal organization of rapid eye
movement (REM) sleep microarchitecture between healthy controls and outpatients with major depressive
disorder (MDD). Methods: Forty age-matched subjects, 20 men and 20 women, half with MDD,
were selected from an archive of sleep electroencephalography (EEG) data collected under identical conditions.
Each participant spent 2 consecutive nights in the Sleep Study Unit of the University of Texas
Southwestern Medical Center at Dallas, the first of which served as adaptation. The average amplitude in
each of 5 conventional EEG frequency bands was computed for each REM period across the second night.
Data were then coded for group and sex. Results: Aside from REM latency, none of the key sleep
macroarchitectural variables differentiated MDD patients from controls. REM latency was longest in men
with MDD. Sleep microarchitecture, however, did show a number of between-group differences. In general,
slower frequencies declined across REM periods, with a significant REM period effect for delta, theta
and alpha amplitude. Group × sex interactions were also obtained for theta and alpha. Beta activity
showed a unique temporal profile in each group, supported by a significant REM period × group × sex
interaction. In addition, the temporal change in theta amplitude across REM periods was most striking in
women with MDD. Conclusions: This study suggests that, like during non-REM sleep, EEG amplitude
shows a systematic temporal change over successive REM sleep periods and also shows elements that are
both disease- and sex-dependent.
Objectif : Déterminer s’il y a des différences significatives dans l’organisation temporelle de la micro-architecture
du sommeil paradoxal entre des témoins en bonne santé et des patients en service externe atteints
de trouble dépressif majeur (TDM). Méthodes : Quarante sujets jumelés selon l’âge, soit 20 hommes et 20
femmes, dont la moitié étaient atteints de TDM, ont été choisis dans une archive de données électroencéphalographiques
(EEG) sur le sommeil recueillies dans des conditions identiques. Chaque participant
a passé deux nuits consécutives à l’Unité d’étude du sommeil du Centre médical de l’Université du sudouest
du Texas à Dallas, dont la première a servi de période d’adaptation. On a calculé l’amplitude moyenne
de chacune des cinq bandes classiques de fréquence EEG pour chaque période de sommeil paradoxal au |
| Appears in Collections: | Psychiatry, Department of
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| Liscombe, 2002.pdf | | 49Kb | Adobe PDF | View/Open |
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