Objectives: Depressive symptoms are observed in a relatively large series of patients with delayed sleep phase syndrome (DSPS). This study was undertaken to investigate the prevalence, characteristics, and factors associated with depressive symptoms among DSPS patients.
Methods: This study targeted 90 consecutive patients (54 men, 27.
Study Objectives: The objective of this study was to clarify the clinical features of sighted patients with non-24-hour sleep-wake syndrome.
Design: Clinical analyses of consecutive patients suffering from non-24-hour sleep-wake syndrome.
Setting: The sleep disorders clinic at Kohnodai Hospital, National Center of Neurology and Psychiatry, Japan.
Previous studies have reported that time perception in humans fluctuates over a 24-h period. Behavioral changes seem to affect human time perception, so that the fluctuation in human time perception may be the result of such changes due to self-determined activities. Recently, we carried out a study in which a healthy human cohort was asked to perform simultaneously loaded cognitive tasks under controlled conditions, and found that time perception decreased linearly from morning to evening.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFStudy Objectives: There is a long-standing controversy surrounding the existence of dream experiences during non-rapid eye movement (NREM) sleep. Previous studies have not answered the question whether this "NREM dream" originates from the NREM sleep mechanism because the subject might simply be recalling experiences from the preceding rapid eye movement (REM) sleep.
Methods: We scheduled 11 healthy men to repeat 20-minute nap trials separated by 40-minute periods of enforced wakefulness across a period of 3 days.
It has been postulated that time estimation during nocturnal sleep in humans can be explained by an interval timing clock inside the brain. However, no systematic investigations have been carried out with respect to how the human brain perceives the passage of time during sleep. The brain mechanisms of over- or underestimation of time spent in sleep have not yet been clarified.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFRecent studies have shown that functional variations in clock genes, which generate circadian rhythms through interactive positive/negative feedback loops, contribute to the development of circadian rhythm sleep disorders in humans. Another potential candidate for rhythm disorder susceptibility is casein kinase I epsilon (CKIepsilon), which phosphorylates clock proteins and plays a pivotal role in the circadian clock. To determine whether variations in CKIepsilon induce vulnerability to human circadian rhythm sleep disorders, such as delayed sleep phase syndrome (DSPS) and non-24-h sleep-wake syndrome (N-24), we analyzed all of the coding exons of the human CKIepsilon gene.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEight healthy young male volunteers entered a 20-40 min ultrashort sleep-wake schedule for 78 h in the time-isolation facility. Rectal temperature was continuously recorded. Sleep electroencephalograms (EEGs) obtained during 20 min nap trials were stored in the computer and later analyzed by fast Fourier transform.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPsychiatry Clin Neurosci
August 2002
The international classification of sleep disorders has proposed menstrual-associated sleep disorder. However, few studies have investigated its pathophysiological mechanism. A 34-year-old woman complaining of insomnia in the late luteal phase underwent continuous rectal temperature measurements and simultaneous actigraphic monitoring for 146 days.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe tested whether the human Clock (hClock) gene, one of the essential components of the circadian oscillator, is implicated in the vulnerability to delayed sleep phase syndrome (DSPS) and non-24-hour sleep-wake syndrome (N-24). Screening in the entire coding region of the hClock gene with PCR amplification revealed three polymorphisms, of which two predicted the amino acid substitutions R533Q and H542R. The frequencies of the R533Q and H542R alleles in patients with DSPS or N-24 were very low and not significantly different from those in control subjects.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe circadian modulation of occurrence of non-rapid-eye-movement sleep (NREM) was investigated in 37 volunteers under dim-light conditions after 24-h total sleep deprivation using a 26-h 10/20-min ultra-short sleep-wake schedule. The propensity of NREM showed rapid increase followed by gradual decrease during the subjective day and nocturnal bouts during the subjective night coinciding with melatonin production. The mean propensity of NREM during the subjective day was smaller than that during the subjective night, even though the sleep debt due to the 24-h sleep deprivation would have enhanced NREM more strongly during the subjective day than that during the subjective night.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNine healthy male volunteers (mean age of 24) participated in two experimental sessions of random crossover design: a bright light (5000 lux for 5 h from 00:00 to 05:00 h) session and a dim light (10 lux for 5 h from 00:00 to 05:00 h) session. Subsequently participants entered an ultra-short sleep-wake schedule for 26 h, in which a sleep-wake cycle consisting of 10-min sleep EEG recording on a bed and 20-min resting awake on a semi-upright chair were repeated. Saliva melatonin level and core body temperature was measured throughout the experiment.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFStudy Objectives: This study was aimed to clarify phase angle between sleep propensity and the circadian pacemaker in patients with non-24-hour sleep-wake syndrome (Non-24).
Design And Setting: A case-control study was underaken.
Participants: Sighted patient with Non-24 (4 males and 1 female, aged 16 to 39 y), and sex- and age-matched healthy controls (12 males and 3 females, aged 19 to 35 y) participated the study.