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Cortical excitability on sleep deprivation measured by transcranial magnetic stimulation: A systematic review and meta-analysis. | LitMetric

Cortical excitability on sleep deprivation measured by transcranial magnetic stimulation: A systematic review and meta-analysis.

Brain Res Bull

Sleep Medicine Center, Mental Health Center, West China Hospital, Sichuan University, Chengdu, China. Electronic address:

Published: January 2025

Sleep deprivation is a common public problem, and researchers speculated its neurophysiological mechanisms related to cortical excitatory and inhibitory activity. Recently, transcranial magnetic stimulation combined with electromyography (TMS-EMG) and electroencephalography (TMS-EEG) have been used to assess cortical excitability in sleep-deprived individuals, but the results were inconsistent. Therefore, we conducted a meta-analysis to summarize relevant TMS-evoked indices of excitability and inhibition for exploring the cortical effects of sleep deprivation. In TMS-EMG studies, short-interval cortical inhibition (SICI) significantly decreased in sleep-deprived subjects; while the intracortical facilitation (ICF), resting motor threshold (RMT), and cortical silent period (CSP) were not significant compared to healthy controls. In TMS-EEG studies, the amplitude and slope of TMS-evoked potential (TEP) increased in sleep-deprived subjects. This study indicated that cortical inhibition decreased following sleep deprivation based on the TMS-EMG results and cortical excitability enhanced in the TMS-EEG results, supporting the disturbance of cortical excitability in sleep-deprived individuals.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.brainresbull.2025.111190DOI Listing

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