睡眠和清醒的神经生理学。

Cameron D Harris
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引用次数: 86

摘要

清醒、非快速眼动睡眠和快速眼动睡眠是三种不同的存在状态。每种状态都有其特有的行为和生理模式,并且每种状态都有与其产生和控制相关的特定神经生理机制。脑干中的结构使用各种神经递质来影响中脑和皮层的高级大脑结构。ARAS向丘脑、下丘脑和基底前脑提供胆碱能、去甲肾上腺素能和谷氨酰胺能刺激,导致皮层的胆碱能和谷氨酰胺能兴奋。活跃的大脑皮层表现出非同步脑电图的特征模式,表明处于清醒状态。各种因素影响睡眠的需要和时间。这些因素影响孤束核,导致其向中脑和前脑结构的去甲肾上腺素能投射抑制ARAS的活性,导致向皮质的抑制性gaba能丘脑皮质投射失活。在激活降低的状态下,大脑皮层呈现出同步脑电图模式。非快速眼动睡眠和快速眼动睡眠之间的过渡是由蓝斑座的去肾上腺素能神经元和中缝的5 -羟色胺能神经元(称为REM-off细胞)和口桥网状核的胆碱能神经元(称为REM-on细胞)控制的。其他大脑结构也参与快速眼动睡眠相关现象的产生和控制,如眼球运动和肌肉张力失调。在清醒时,交感神经张力增加,副交感神经张力减少,维持大多数器官系统处于活动或准备状态。在非快速眼动睡眠期间,交感神经张力下降,副交感神经活动增加,从而造成活动减少的状态。快速眼动睡眠的特点是副交感神经活动增加,交感神经活动变化与某些大脑功能的激活增加有关。清醒和睡眠状态的特征是由典型的脑电图、肌电图和脑电图模式定义的阶段。清醒阶段的脑电图模式以α节律为主。随着第一阶段睡眠的开始,α节律减弱,可见相对低电压和混合频率的脑电图模式。进入第二阶段睡眠是由睡眠纺锤波或k -复合体的出现来定义的。进一步进入深度睡眠阶段3和4是由高振幅、低频脑电图活动的出现来定义的。睡眠阶段的进展在整个睡眠期间以60到120分钟的周期发生。各种昼夜环境和本体因素影响睡眠阶段发生的模式。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Neurophysiology of sleep and wakefulness.

Wakefulness, NREM sleep, and REM sleep are three distinct states of existence. Each state has characteristic behavioral and physiologic patterns,and each has specific neurophysiologic mechanisms associated with its generation and control. Structures in the brainstem use various neurotransmitters to influence higher brain structures in the midbrain and cortex. The ARAS provides cholinergic, noradrenergic, and glutaminergic stimulation to the thalamus, hypothalamus, and basal forebrain resulting in cholinergic and glutaminergic excitation of the cortex. An active cortex that exhibits a characteristic pattern of desynchronized EEG manifests wakefulness. Various factors affect the need and timing of sleep onset. These factors influence the nucleus tractus solitarius, causing its noradrenergic projections to midbrain and forebrain structures to inhibit activity in the ARAS, resulting inactivation of inhibitory GABAergic thalamocortical projections to the cor-tex. During a state of decreased activation, the cortex exhibits a pattern of synchronized EEG. Transition between NREM sleep and REM sleep is controlled by noradrenergic neurons in the loci coeruleus and serotoninergic neurons in the raphe called REM-off cells and cholinergic neurons in the nucleus reticularis pontis oralis called REM-on cells. Other brain structures are involved in generation and control of REM sleep-related phenomena, such as eye movement and muscle atonia. During wakefulness, there is increased sympathetic tone and decreased parasympathetic tone that maintains most organ systems in a state of action or readiness. During NREM sleep, there is decreased sympathetic tone and increased parasympathetic activity that creates a state of reduced activity. REM sleep is characterized by increased parasympathetic activity and variable sympathetic activity associated with increased activation of certain brain functions. The states of wakefulness and sleep are characterized as stages that are defined by stereotypical EEG, EMG, and EOG patterns. Wakefulness stage has an EEG pattern predominated by the alpha rhythm. With onset of stage 1 sleep, the alpha rhythm attenuates, and an EEG pattern of relatively low voltage and mixed frequency is seen. Progression to stage 2 sleep is defined by the appearance of sleep spindles or K-complexes. Further progression into the deepest sleep stages 3 and 4 is defined by the occurrence of high-amplitude, low-frequency EEG activity. The progression of sleep stages occurs in cycles of 60 to 120 minutes throughout the sleep period. Various circadian environmental and ontologic factors affect the pattern of sleep stage occurrence.

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