Your doctor has your MRI scan, have them validate whether this is part of your sleeping problems.
http://www.frontiersin.org/sleep_and_chronobiology/10.3389/fneur.2012.00105/abstract
Sleep complaints increase profoundly with age; prevalence estimates of
insomnia in the elderly reach up to 37%. The three major types of
nocturnal complaints are difficulties initiating (DIS) and maintaining
(DMS) sleep and early morning awakening (EMA), of which the latter
appears most characteristic for aging. The neural correlates associated
with these complaints have hardly been investigated, hampering the
development of rational treatment and prevention.
A recent study on
structural brain correlates of insomnia showed that overall severity,
but not duration, of insomnia complaints is associated with lower gray
matter (GM) density in part of the left orbitofrontal cortex (OFC).
Following up on this, we investigated, in an independent sample of
people not diagnosed with insomnia, whether individual differences in GM
density are associated with differences in DIS, DMS, and EMA.
Sixty
five healthy participants (mean age = 41 years, range 18–56) filled out
questionnaires and underwent structural magnetic resonance imaging.
Three compound Z-scores were computed for questionnaire items relating
to DIS, DMS, and EMA. Whole-brain voxel-based morphometry was used to
investigate their association with GM density. Results show that
participants with lower GM density in a region where the left inferior
OFC borders the insula report more EMA, but not DIS or DMS.
This is the
first study to investigate structural brain correlates of specific sleep
characteristics that can translate into complaints in insomniacs. The
selective association of EMA with orbitofrontal GM density makes our
findings particularly relevant to elderly people, where EMA represents
the most characteristic complaint. It is hypothesized that low GM
density in aforementioned orbitofrontal area affects its role in sensing
comfort. An intact ability to evaluate comfort may be crucial to
maintain sleep, especially at the end of the night when sleep is
vulnerable because homeostatic sleep propensity has dissipated.
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