深度睡眠中的慢波支持心脏功能

S. Huwiler, M. Carro-Domínguez, F. Stich, R. Sala, F. Aziri, A. Trippel, Tabea Ryf, Susanne Markendorf, D. Niederseer, Philipp Bohm, Gloria Stoll, Lily Laubscher, Jeivicaa Thevan, Christina M. Spengler, Joanna Gawinecka, Elena Osto, Reto Huber, Nicole Wenderoth, Christian Schmied, C. Lustenberger
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However, to date, the specific mechanisms through which sleep affects cardiovascular function and whether slow waves accelerate recovery remain elusive.\nMethods\nHere, we explored the role of slow waves in promoting cardiovascular function. In this randomized, cross-over trial involving 18 healthy male participants (Huwiler et al., 2023), we investigated how experimentally enhancing slow waves via auditory stimulation (Huwiler et al., 2022) impacts cardiovascular dynamics during sleep and next-day cardiac function, assessed via an echocardiography. All participants underwent three experimental nights including two conditions for slow wave enhancement and one SHAM control condition while brain oscillatory, blood pressure, and cardiac dynamics were continuously measured during sleep.\nResults\nUsing a linear mixed-effect model approach, we found auditory stimulation to significantly increase slow wave activity (F(2, 33.095) = 11.397, p < 0.001) during times of stimulation. This slow wave enhancement coincided with a dynamic cardiovascular activation, indicated through short increases in blood pressure and a biphasic heart rate response. After sleep, we found a significant increase in general longitudinal strain (F(2, 34) = 81.17, p < 0.001), an increase in left-ventricular ejection fraction (F(2, 34) = 4.55, p = 0.018), and a decrease in E/e’ ratio (F(2, 34) = 3.38, p = 0.046) for both slow wave stimulation conditions compared to SHAM.\nDiscussion/Conclusion\nWe show that slow wave stimulation induces a cardiovascular activation response possibly related to increasing cardiovascular stability during sleep (De Zambotti et al., 2016). Moreover, we demonstrate that slow wave stimulation enhances left-ventricular systolic and diastolic function, both together indicating improved cardiac function. Altogether, this points towards the functional involvement of slow waves in promoting cardiovascular health. Therefore, sleep slow wave stimulation may be considered a potential supplementary method in treating cardiovascular diseases involving decreased left-ventricular function. Furthermore, our findings hint that enhancing slow waves could potentially optimize post-exercise recovery processes and increase cardiovascular well-being.\nReferences\nDe Zambotti, M., Willoughby, A. R., Franzen, P. L., Clark, D. B., Baker, F. C., & Colrain, I. M. (2016). K-complexes: Interaction between the central and autonomic nervous systems during sleep. Sleep, 39(5), 1129–1137. https://doi.org/10.5665/sleep.5770\nGrandner, M. A., Alfonso-Miller, P., Fernandez-Mendoza, J., Shetty, S., Shenoy, S., & Combs, D. (2016). Sleep: Important considerations for the prevention of cardiovascular disease. Current Opinion in Cardiology, 31(5), 551–565. https://doi.org/10.1097/HCO.0000000000000324\nHuwiler, S., Carro-Domínguez, M., Stich, F. M., Sala, R., Aziri, F., Trippel, A., Ryf, T., Markendorf, S., Niederseer, D., Bohm, P., Stoll, G., Laubscher, L., Thevan, J., Spengler, C. M., Gawinecka, J., Osto, E., Huber, R., Wenderoth, N., Schmied, C., & Lustenberger, C. (2023). Auditory stimulation of sleep slow waves enhances left ventricular function in humans. European Heart Journal, 44(40), 4288–4291. https://doi.org/10.1093/eurheartj/ehad630\nHuwiler, S., Carro Dominguez, M., Huwyler, S., Kiener, L., Stich, F. M., Sala, R., Aziri, F., Trippel, A., Schmied, C., Huber, R., Wenderoth, N., & Lustenberger, C. (2022). Effects of auditory sleep modulation approaches on brain oscillatory and cardiovascular dynamics. 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引用次数: 0

摘要

导言:睡眠对心血管健康的作用,尤其是非快速眼动(NREM)深睡眠的影响,在预防心血管疾病方面越来越受到关注(Grandner 等人,2016 年)。从本质上讲,慢波是深睡眠期间突出的大脑振荡,似乎代表着人体重要的心血管恢复过程。然而,迄今为止,睡眠影响心血管功能的具体机制以及慢波是否能加速恢复仍是个未知数。在这项涉及 18 名健康男性参与者(Huwiler 等人,2023 年)的随机交叉试验中,我们研究了通过听觉刺激增强慢波的实验(Huwiler 等人,2022 年)如何影响睡眠期间的心血管动态和第二天的心脏功能(通过超声心动图进行评估)。所有参与者都接受了三个晚上的实验,包括两个慢波增强条件和一个 SHAM 控制条件,同时在睡眠期间连续测量大脑振荡、血压和心脏动态。结果使用线性混合效应模型方法,我们发现听觉刺激能显著增加刺激时的慢波活动(F(2, 33.095) = 11.397, p < 0.001)。这种慢波增强与动态心血管激活相吻合,表现为血压的短暂升高和心率的双相反应。睡眠后,我们发现总体纵向应变显著增加(F(2, 34) = 81.17, p < 0.001),左心室射血分数增加(F(2, 34) = 4.55, p = 0.018),E/e'比值下降(F(2, 34) = 3.38, p = 0.讨论/结论我们发现,慢波刺激诱导的心血管激活反应可能与睡眠期间心血管稳定性的增加有关(De Zambotti et al、2016).此外,我们还证明,慢波刺激可增强左心室收缩和舒张功能,两者共同表明心脏功能得到了改善。总之,这表明慢波在促进心血管健康方面的功能参与。因此,在治疗涉及左心室功能减退的心血管疾病时,睡眠慢波刺激可被视为一种潜在的辅助方法。此外,我们的研究结果还表明,增强慢波有可能优化运动后的恢复过程并提高心血管健康水平。参考文献De Zambotti, M., Willoughby, A. R., Franzen, P. L., Clark, D. B., Baker, F. C., & Colrain, I. M. (2016).K-复合体:睡眠期间中枢神经系统与自主神经系统之间的相互作用。https://doi.org/10.5665/sleep.5770Grandner, M. A., Alfonso-Miller, P., Fernandez-Mendoza, J., Shetty, S., Shenoy, S., & Combs, D. (2016).睡眠:预防心血管疾病的重要考虑因素。https://doi.org/10.1097/HCO.0000000000000324Huwiler,S.、Carro-Domínguez,M.、Stich,F. M.、Sala,R.、Aziri,F.、Trippel,A.、Ryf,T、Markendorf, S., Niederseer, D., Bohm, P., Stoll, G., Laubscher, L., Thevan, J., Spengler, C. M., Gawinecka, J., Osto, E., Huber, R., Wenderoth, N., Schmied, C., & Lustenberger, C. (2023)。听觉刺激睡眠慢波可增强人体左心室功能。https://doi.org/10.1093/eurheartj/ehad630Huwiler, S., Carro Dominguez, M., Huwyler, S., Kiener, L., Stich, F. M., Sala, R., Aziri, F., Trippel, A., Schmied, C., Huber, R., Wenderoth, N., & Lustenberger, C. (2022)。听觉睡眠调节方法对大脑振荡和心血管动态的影响。睡眠,45(9),1-36。https://doi.org/10.1093/sleep/zsac155
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Slow waves during deep sleep support cardiac function
Introduction The role of sleep in cardiovascular health, particularly the impact of deep non-rapid eye movement (NREM) sleep, is gaining interest in the prevention of cardiovascular diseases (Grandner et al., 2016). Essentially slow waves, prominent brain oscillations during deep sleep, seem to represent an important cardiovascular recovery process for the human body. However, to date, the specific mechanisms through which sleep affects cardiovascular function and whether slow waves accelerate recovery remain elusive. Methods Here, we explored the role of slow waves in promoting cardiovascular function. In this randomized, cross-over trial involving 18 healthy male participants (Huwiler et al., 2023), we investigated how experimentally enhancing slow waves via auditory stimulation (Huwiler et al., 2022) impacts cardiovascular dynamics during sleep and next-day cardiac function, assessed via an echocardiography. All participants underwent three experimental nights including two conditions for slow wave enhancement and one SHAM control condition while brain oscillatory, blood pressure, and cardiac dynamics were continuously measured during sleep. Results Using a linear mixed-effect model approach, we found auditory stimulation to significantly increase slow wave activity (F(2, 33.095) = 11.397, p < 0.001) during times of stimulation. This slow wave enhancement coincided with a dynamic cardiovascular activation, indicated through short increases in blood pressure and a biphasic heart rate response. After sleep, we found a significant increase in general longitudinal strain (F(2, 34) = 81.17, p < 0.001), an increase in left-ventricular ejection fraction (F(2, 34) = 4.55, p = 0.018), and a decrease in E/e’ ratio (F(2, 34) = 3.38, p = 0.046) for both slow wave stimulation conditions compared to SHAM. Discussion/Conclusion We show that slow wave stimulation induces a cardiovascular activation response possibly related to increasing cardiovascular stability during sleep (De Zambotti et al., 2016). Moreover, we demonstrate that slow wave stimulation enhances left-ventricular systolic and diastolic function, both together indicating improved cardiac function. Altogether, this points towards the functional involvement of slow waves in promoting cardiovascular health. Therefore, sleep slow wave stimulation may be considered a potential supplementary method in treating cardiovascular diseases involving decreased left-ventricular function. Furthermore, our findings hint that enhancing slow waves could potentially optimize post-exercise recovery processes and increase cardiovascular well-being. References De Zambotti, M., Willoughby, A. R., Franzen, P. L., Clark, D. B., Baker, F. C., & Colrain, I. M. (2016). K-complexes: Interaction between the central and autonomic nervous systems during sleep. Sleep, 39(5), 1129–1137. https://doi.org/10.5665/sleep.5770 Grandner, M. A., Alfonso-Miller, P., Fernandez-Mendoza, J., Shetty, S., Shenoy, S., & Combs, D. (2016). Sleep: Important considerations for the prevention of cardiovascular disease. Current Opinion in Cardiology, 31(5), 551–565. https://doi.org/10.1097/HCO.0000000000000324 Huwiler, S., Carro-Domínguez, M., Stich, F. M., Sala, R., Aziri, F., Trippel, A., Ryf, T., Markendorf, S., Niederseer, D., Bohm, P., Stoll, G., Laubscher, L., Thevan, J., Spengler, C. M., Gawinecka, J., Osto, E., Huber, R., Wenderoth, N., Schmied, C., & Lustenberger, C. (2023). Auditory stimulation of sleep slow waves enhances left ventricular function in humans. European Heart Journal, 44(40), 4288–4291. https://doi.org/10.1093/eurheartj/ehad630 Huwiler, S., Carro Dominguez, M., Huwyler, S., Kiener, L., Stich, F. M., Sala, R., Aziri, F., Trippel, A., Schmied, C., Huber, R., Wenderoth, N., & Lustenberger, C. (2022). Effects of auditory sleep modulation approaches on brain oscillatory and cardiovascular dynamics. Sleep, 45(9), 1–36. https://doi.org/10.1093/sleep/zsac155
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