Long‐term vs. short‐term processes regulating REM sleep
- 28 February 2002
- journal article
- Published by Wiley in Journal of Sleep Research
- Vol. 11 (1) , 17-28
- https://doi.org/10.1046/j.1365-2869.2002.00275.x
Abstract
In cats, rats, and mice, the amount of rapid eye movement sleep (REMS) lost during a sleep deprivation (SD) predicts the subsequent REMS rebound during recovery sleep. This suggests that REMS is homeostatically regulated and that a need or pressure for REMS accumulates in its absence, i.e. during both wakefulness and non-rapid eye movement sleep (NREMS). Conversely, it has been proposed that REMS pressure accumulates exclusively during NREMS [Benington and Heller, Am. J. Physiol. 266 (1994) R1992; Prog. Neurobiol. 44 (1994b) 433]. This hypothesis is based on the analysis of the duration of successive NREMS and REMS episodes and of electroencephalogram (EEG) events preceding REMS. Pre-REMS events (PREs) do not always result in sustained REMS and can thus be regarded as REMS attempts that increase as NREMS progresses. It is assumed that two processes regulating REMS can resolve the apparent contradiction between these two concepts: a 'long-term' process that homeostatically regulates the daily REMS amount and a 'short-term' process that regulates the NREM--REMS cycle. These issues were addressed in two SD experiments in rats. The two SDs varied in length (12 and 24 h) and resulted in very similar compensatory changes in NREMS but evoked very different changes for all REMS parameters studied. The large REMS increase observed after 24-h SD was accompanied by a reduction in unsuccessful PREs and an increase in sustained REMS episodes, together resulting in a threefold increase in the success-rate to enter REMS. Changes in success-rate matched those of a theoretically derived long-term REMS pressure. The SD induced changes in sleep architecture could be reproduced by assuming that the increased long-term REMS pressure interacts with the short-term process by increasing the probability to enter and remain in REMS.Keywords
This publication has 50 references indexed in Scilit:
- REM sleep — by default?Neuroscience & Biobehavioral Reviews, 2000
- Effect of frequent brief awakenings from nonREM sleep on the nonREM-REM sleep cyclePsychiatry and Clinical Neurosciences, 1998
- The Transition from Slow-wave Sleep to Paradoxical Sleep: Evolving Facts and Concepts of the Neurophysiological Processes Underlying the Intermediate Stage of SleepNeuroscience & Biobehavioral Reviews, 1996
- Pattern of desynchronized sleep during deprivation and recovery induced in the rat by changes in ambient temperature*Journal of Sleep Research, 1994
- Effects of 12-h sleep deprivation and of 12-h cold exposure on sleep regulation and cortical temperature in the ratPhysiology & Behavior, 1993
- Combining different models of sleep regulationJournal of Sleep Research, 1992
- Sleep continuity and the REM-nonREM cycle in the rat under baseline conditions and after sleep deprivationPhysiology & Behavior, 1991
- Sleep Stage Physiology, Mood, and Vigilance Responses to Total Sleep Deprivation in Healthy 80‐Year‐Olds and 20‐Year‐OldsPsychophysiology, 1990
- Instrumental and pharmacological paradoxical sleep deprivation in mice: Strain differencesNeuropharmacology, 1980
- The orthodox-paradoxical sleep cycle in the ratCellular and Molecular Life Sciences, 1976