Spectral power and coherence analysis of sleep EEG in AIDS patients: decrease in interhemispheric coherence.

Sleep

Department of Clinical Neurophysiology, Rudolf Virchow University Hospital, Freie Universität Berlin, Germany.

Published: February 1993

Fifteen patients aged between 26 and 55 years with the acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS) and various cerebral manifestations of the disease underwent an all-night sleep electroencephalogram (EEG) registration. The recordings of 15 age-matched volunteers were examined as controls. Sleep stages were determined visually and the following spectral analysis was based on corresponding artifact-free 40-second periods. The sampling rate was 64 second-1, the spectral resolution was 0.25 Hz and the frequency ranged from 0.25-24 Hz. The power density spectra of eight EEG derivations (left and right frontopolar, frontal, central and occipital; reference montage to the ipsilateral Cb electrodes) and the coherence spectra of interhemispheric (interfrontal, interoccipital) and intrahemispheric (frontooccipital, left and right) channel pairs were computed. The power density of the patients in the 11.5-13-Hz frequency range of nonrapid eye movement (NREM) sleep was considerably lower than that of the controls (p < 0.05 and p < 0.01 at left and right frontal derivations, two-tailed Mann-Whitney U test). The power density of rapid eye movement (REM) sleep showed no consistent differences between the two groups. The interfrontal coherence of the whole frequency range below 12 Hz was markedly lower in the patient group. This applied to NREM sleep and also to REM sleep (p < 0.01 and p < 0.001 for different frequency bands between 1 and 12 Hz in NREM and REM sleep). Possible relations to clinical features are discussed.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/sleep/16.2.137DOI Listing

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