Use the labels in the right column to find what you want. Or you can go thru them one by one, there are only 30,172 posts. Searching is done in the search box in upper left corner. I blog on anything to do with stroke. DO NOT DO ANYTHING SUGGESTED HERE AS I AM NOT MEDICALLY TRAINED, YOUR DOCTOR IS, LISTEN TO THEM. BUT I BET THEY DON'T KNOW HOW TO GET YOU 100% RECOVERED. I DON'T EITHER BUT HAVE PLENTY OF QUESTIONS FOR YOUR DOCTOR TO ANSWER.
Wednesday, August 24, 2016
Circadian rhythms and sleep loss: what happens in your brain when you pull an all-nighter?
This is what happened to me when I entered the hospital Sunday morning at 8am and didn't actually sleep until Thursday night due to all the activity in the ER and stepdown units I was in. I remember falling asleep listening to a therapist talk to me on Thursday afternoon trying to get me to perform some task. I failed at what day it was, which was a stupid question to ask. What is your doctors sleep protocol to make sure you are rested and able to consolidate the memories of your therapies? https://theconversation.com/circadian-rhythms-and-sleep-loss-what-happens-in-your-brain-when-you-pull-an-all-nighter-63853
Ever wondered what happens inside your brain when you stay awake
for a day, a night and another day, before you finally go to sleep?
Well, we just found out.
It has been known for many years
that how sleepy we are, how well we can add up numbers, pay attention
or conduct a working memory task depends on how long we have been awake
and the time of day. Typically if we stay awake over a period of two
days (a day, a night and then the next day) the first 16 hours or so is
of wakefulness – performance is good and doesn’t change much.
But then, as we enter the “biological night time”, as indicated by a
rise of the hormone melatonin, performance deteriorates rapidly and
reaches a minimum at around 6-8am the following morning. On the second
day, performance can get a little better (but still well below that of
day one) and only returns to normal, baseline levels after a good
night’s sleep.
The key characteristic of this performance timeline is that it
doesn’t deteriorate linearly based on how long you’ve been awake but is
instead modulated by the time of day. In fact, we know now that it isn’t
actually “time of day” but “internal biological time of day” that
causes the effects of sleep loss. At the behavioural level, then, brain
function is determined by the combined effects of circadian rhythmicity
and sleep homeostasis – the sleep pressure that builds up during
wakefulness and dissipates during sleep.
Circadian rhythm
Circadian rhythmicity can be observed in many aspects of behaviour
and physiology and is generated by circadian clocks in nearly every cell
in the brain and body. Locally, these rhythms are generated by a feedback loop of clock proteins onto clock genes that express genetic information that is then translated into proteins.
All these clocks – including brain clocks – are synchronised by a
central director/conductor located in a brain area called the
suprachiasmatic nucleus in the hypothalamus. This area of the brain also
drives the rhythm of melatonin in blood and saliva.
So how does this combined action of circadian rhythmicity and sleep
homeostasis work? Well, during the biological day the circadian clock
generates an alerting or wakefulness promoting signal that becomes
stronger as the day progresses and reaches maximum strength in the
evening. This may seem a bit paradoxical, but this signal needs to
become stronger as the day progresses because sleep pressure also
increases the longer we’re awake – so something needs to keep us alert.
But as we enter the biological night, the wakefulness promoting
circadian signal dissipates and turns into a sleep promoting signal with
a maximum strength at around 6-8am. Again, this may seem a bit
paradoxical but under normal conditions when we sleep at night, this
comes in handy because the sleep promoting signal allows us to continue
to sleep well even after six or seven hours when the sleep pressure has
dissipated.
Problems arise when we stay awake at night and the next day, however.
During the night, sleep pressure remains high and even increases
because we are awake. The circadian signal no longer opposes this
pressure and we struggle to stay awake and to perform. The next day, the
circadian clock, which still ticks whether we are asleep or not, starts
promoting awake signals again so it becomes a little bit easier to
perform and stay awake.
What does this look like in the brain?
This is all fine and good and makes sense. Indeed, this working model
is widely accepted from what we’ve seen happen when it comes to
behaviour. But what does this combined action of circadian rhythm and
sleep homeostasis look like within the human brain?
Our team of researchers, from the University of Liege and the
University of Surrey, scanned the brains of 33 people using functional
magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) – which gives a detailed picture of
levels of neuronal activity throughout the brain – who were sleep
deprived over two days and following a period of recovery sleep. We also
measured melatonin levels to have a good indicator of internal
biological time, which varies between individuals. Our results are published in Science.
For each participant, 13 brain images were obtained while they were
conducting a simple reaction time task. Twelve brain images were
collected during the sleep deprivation at times characterised by those
rapid changes previously observed for performance in the evening and in
the morning. The thirteenth image was taken after recovery sleep.
Activity in several brain regions, and in particular subcortical
areas (such as the thalamus, a major centre for relaying information to
the cortex), followed a 24-hour rhythmic (circadian) pattern the timing
of which, surprisingly, varied across brain regions. Other brain regions
– in particular frontal brain areas including higher-order association areas
– showed a reduction in activity with time awake followed by a return
to pre-sleep deprivation levels after recovery sleep. Some brain regions
displayed a pattern which was a combination of a rhythmic pattern and a
decline associated with time awake.
Even more surprising, these effects of sleep loss on brain activity
were much more widespread when the participants performed a simple
reaction time task compared to a more complex memory-reliant task.
What all this means is that various brain regions appear to be
differently affected by sleep loss and the circadian rhythm, and overall
the results demonstrate both the pervasiveness of these effects, but
also the similarity and local nature of these influences.
The variety in brain responses shows just how complex the mechanisms
are by which the brain responds to sleep loss. It helps us to understand
how the brain might maintain performance during the day and night.
These results may reassure shift workers and people working very long
hours struggling to pay attention and concentrate on their job,
particularly in the early morning hours. Yes, your brain is going to be
different at night than during the day. They also suggest that if you’re
working late, it might be better to wrap it up, get some sleep and
start again in the morning.
It may even help us to better understand why many symptoms in
psychiatric and neurodegenerative conditions wax and wane, and why in
the early morning after a night without sleep we struggle to maintain
attention, whereas in the evening it is not an issue.
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