The Novel Object Recognition task (NOR) is widely used to study vertebrates' memory. It has been proposed as an adequate model for studying memory in different taxonomic groups, allowing similar and comparable results. Although in cephalopods, several research reports could indicate that they recognize objects in their environment, it has not been tested as an experimental paradigm that allows studying different memory phases.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNocturnal epilepsy is a neurological disease that has a significant effect on sleep. Various treatments have been implemented to help mitigate these effects and improve patients' quality of life. The use of experimental animal models for epilepsy has facilitated efficacy assessment and the development of different medications to treat the symptoms of this disease.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAppl Psychophysiol Biofeedback
September 2022
The psychophysiological coherence model proposes that a heart rhythm pattern, known as heart rhythm coherence (HRC), is associated with dominant parasympathetic activity and the entrainment of respiratory function, blood pressure, and heart rhythms. Although the HRC pattern has primarily been assessed during wakefulness, changes in cardiac and autonomic activity that occur during sleep stages can also be associated with the HRC pattern. The objective of this study was to examine whether any differences in the HRC pattern could be detected among various sleep stages.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSleep spindles are an element of the sleep microstructure observed on the EEG during the NREM sleep phase. Sleep spindles are associated to sleep stability functions as well as memory consolidation and optimization of different cognitive processes. On the other hand, Asperger's syndrome (AS) is a generalized developmental disorder in which cognitive and sleep disturbances have been described.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSleep disturbances frequently occur in people with whiplash-associated disorder (WAD) and have been evaluated using questionnaires or actigraphy. It is not clear whether sleep architecture, as assessed by polysomnography (PSG), is altered in individuals with WAD. Additionally, in people with WAD, muscle dysfunction is observed during tasks performed during wakefulness.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFor a long time, numerous sleep alterations induced by nocturnal epilepsy have been described. Such alterations include sleep fragmentation, decrement of sleep efficiency, increment of the wake time after sleep onset (WASO), increment of light sleep, and decrement of sleep depth. On the other hand, gabapentin (GBP), an antiepileptic drug analog of γ-aminobutyric acid (GABA) used as adjunctive and eventually, as a monotherapeutic treatment, induces a significant improvement in patients with both focal and secondarily generalized partial seizures.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAlthough motor activity is actively inhibited during rapid eye movement (REM) sleep, specific activations of the facial mimetic musculature have been observed during this stage, which may be associated with greater emotional dream mentation. Nevertheless, no specific biomarker of emotional valence or arousal related to dream content has been identified to date. In order to explore the electromyographic (EMG) activity (voltage, number, density and duration) of the corrugator and zygomaticus major muscles during REM sleep and its association with emotional dream mentation, this study performed a series of experimental awakenings after observing EMG facial activations during REM sleep.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIntroduction: Extracts of the plant L. (Passifloraceae) were administered intraperitoneally in order to test its effects on sleep.
Method: Experiments were carried out on chronically implanted male adult wistar rats to obtain cerebral (EEG), ocular (EOG) and muscular (EMG) activities throughout their states of vigilance.
J Med Primatol
February 2018
Background: The physiological mechanisms that allow for sleeping in a vertical position, which is primordial for arboreal primates, have not been studied yet.
Methods: A non-invasive polysomnographic study of 6 spider monkeys (Ateles geoffroyi) was conducted. The relative beta power of the motor cortex and its linear relation with muscle tone in the facial mentalis muscle and the abductor caudae medialis muscle of the tail during wakefulness and sleep stages were calculated.
The normal sleep patterns of the spider monkey (Ateles geoffroyi) have not been described yet. The objective of this study was to characterize the electrophysiological patterns, sleeping postures, and sleep-wake cycle in semi-restricted spider monkeys. Continuous 24-hr polysomnographic (PSG) recordings, involving simultaneous recording of non-invasive electroencephalographic (EEG), electro-oculographic (EOG), and electromyographic (EMG) activities, were carried out in captive monkeys living in outdoor rainforest enclosures.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFUnlabelled: As mammals, birds exhibit two sleep phases, slow wave sleep (SWS) and REM (Rapid Eye Movement) sleep characterized by presenting different electrophysiological patterns of brain activity. During SWS a high amplitude slow wave pattern in brain activity is observed. This activity is substituted by a low amplitude fast frequency pattern during REM sleep.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFObjective: To determine the relationship between the degree of addiction (DA) and pattern of tobacco consumption (PTC) with anxiety and depression in smokers who want to quit smoking.
Material And Methods: At admission to a smoking cessation program 495 smokers were surveyed to determine anxiety (IDARE Test), depression (Beck Inventory Test), DA (Fagerström Test) and PTC (pack-years).
Results: DA ≥ 6 points was associated with high anxiety levels RM=1.
The sensorimotor cortex and the cerebellum are interconnected by the corticopontocerebellar (CPC) pathway and by neuronal groups such as the serotonergic system. Our aims were to determine the levels of cerebellar serotonin (5-HT) and lipid peroxidation (LP) after cortical iron injection and to analyze the motor function produced by the injury. Rats were divided into the following three groups: control, injured and recovering.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe most common side effects following administration of antiepileptic drugs involve alterations in sleep architecture and varying degrees of daytime sleepiness. Oxcarbazepine is a drug that is approved as monotherapy for the treatment of partial seizures and generalized tonic-clonic seizures. However, there is no information about its effects on sleep pattern organization; therefore, the objective of this work was to analyze such effects.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCarbamazepine (CBZ) is a widely used antiepileptic agent that frequently interacts with other drugs. Recently, it has been reported that CBZ is able to modify the disturbed sleep patterns induced by kainic acid in epileptics. As a pharmacokinetic-pharmacodynamic characterization in the same animal is not possible due to the stress induced by blood sampling, it is important to establish if kainic acid is able to modify the pharmacokinetics of CBZ.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: It has been demonstrated that the interrelation between pain and sleep produces changes in sleep patterns and pain perception. Although some evidences suggest that sleep and pain may interact in a complex way, polysomnographic studies in animals with acute nociception are limited in number.
Aims: This study was carried out in order to evaluate the effect of intra-articular knee injection of uric acid on sleep-wake patterns.
Comp Biochem Physiol A Mol Integr Physiol
November 2008
Temporal lobe epilepsy is one of the most common types of epilepsy. Progress in the understanding and treatment of this type of epilepsy would be greatly facilitated by the availability of an animal model, which reproduced the behavioral and electrographic features of this condition. In this context, kainic acid (KA, 2-carboxy-3-carboxymethyl-4-isopropenylpyrrolidine) administration causes a syndrome characterized by an acute status epilepticus and subsequent brain damage similar to that in temporal lobe epilepsy of humans.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNorepinephrine (NE) plays an important role in motor recovery after brain damage. Most studies concerning NE activity have been performed in the cerebellum, while the role of the pons, the site where the norepinephrinergic locus coeruleus is located, has not yet been elucidated. For this work, we studied the changes in cerebellar and pontine NE content in sham-operated (n = 17), motor cortex injured (n = 6) and recovered rats (n = 12).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIt has been reported that norepinephrine (NE) plays an important role in recovery after brain damage. However, the role of the pons, the site where the norepinephrinergic locus coeruleus (LC) is located, has not been elucidated. In order to study the changes in the pontine NE content in either noninjured, injured or recovered rats, we used 35 animals trained to walk across to a walkway where their footprints were recorded.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFElectrophysiological and behavioral characteristics of the states of vigilance were analyzed in chronically implanted specimens of the turkey Meleagris gallopavo (M. gallopavo). Five different states of vigilance were observed throughout the nyctohemeral period: active wakefulness (AW), quiet wakefulness (QW), drowsiness (D), slow wave sleep (SWS) and rapid eye movement (REM) sleep.
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