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The importance of sleep is widely appreciated, but the actual function of sleep remains unknown. Sleep occurs in much of the animal kingdom, in all mammals and birds and even in some lower forms. Sleep deprivation impairs brain function, and in rats, total sleep deprivation for 2-3 weeks results in death. One hypothesized role of sleep is for restoration and reorganization of neuronal circuits. There is some indirect evidence that during sleep, when cerebral energy requirements are reduced, cell resources are diverted to protein synthesis for the restoration of structure and function. The objectives of the present study are: 1) to further define the relationship between regional rates of cerebral protein synthesis (rCPS) and sleep and 2) to ascertain whether sleep-dependent visual learning during slow wave sleep (SWS) results in increases in rCPS in the primary visual cortex. We propose to use a novel positron emission tomography (PET)-based technique to quantify regional rates of cerebral protein synthesis (rCPS) in young, adult, healthy volunteers. The first objective will be addressed in Part I in which we will study each subject under the following three conditions: 1) awake and sleep-sated, 2) awake and sleep-deprived, and 3) during SWS after sleep-deprivation. Our aim is to complete fully successful studies in 15 subjects. The second objective will be addressed in Part II in which we will assess the relationship between rCPS and sleep-dependent visual learning on a retinotopically specific task. Each participant will serve as his own control by comparing the trained primary visual cortex hemisphere with the untrained hemisphere to which comparable visual information is presented but without learning. In Part II we will study two groups of subjects: 1) One group will be studied during SWS following the training session; 2) The second group will be studied at the same interval following the training session but awake. Subjects will be monitored with polysomnography to identify the stages of sleep. Our aim in part II is to complete fully successful studies in 15 subjects in each of the two groups. We anticipate that the results of Part I will identify changes in rCPS in specific brain regions which are characteristic of SWS and results of Part II may reveal relationships between rCPS and memory consolidation during SWS.
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Healthy male and female volunteers who have no present or past diagnosis of neurologic, medical or psychiatric conditions which may confound either learning trails, normal sleep patterns or the ability to undergo sleep deprivation.
Healthy male and female subjects, 18-28 years of age, who do not meet any exclusion criteria, with self-reported normal sleep patterns (i.e., 6-9 h per night) and no major sleep disruptions during the four weeks prior to evaluation will be considered for inclusion in the study.
EXCLUSION CRITERIA INCLUDE A HISTORY OF, OR CURRENT:
(5) sleep disorders or medical conditions associated with chronically disordered sleep which may confound performance on learning trails or interfere with the sleep requirements of this study,
(6) visual impairments which may confound performance on learning trails,
(7) claustrophobic subjects,
(8) subjects who meet the above inclusion criteria, but are unable to cooperate with the requirements of the study (e.g. refusal to wear actigraphs or maintain 10 hours time in bed, reported difficulty sleeping away from home or on their backs).
(9) Subjects with chronic indicated or non-indicated use of any medications which interfere with sleep architecture and/or learning trails will be excluded. Generally, we will prohibit the use of medications/agents (e.g. anti-histamines, benadryl, melatonin, cigarettes, chocolate, coffee, tea, caffeine drinks etc.), which have significant CNS penetration, are alerting, and/or disrupt physiologic sleep-wake cycles or sleep architecture, for the 72 hrs immediately preceding presentation for the study. To acclimatize subjects, we will encourage patients to discontinue or minimize the use of these agents/medications (e.g. less than or equal to 1 cup of coffee/day) at the time of initial screening (at the same time as actigraphy application, approximately 2 wks prior to the study).
Similarly, we ask subjects to minimize alcohol use for the 2 wks prior to the study and will discontinue alcohol use for the 72 hrs immediately preceding the study.
(10) Subjects who have used illicit drugs (marijuana, cocaine, heroin, etc.) within the immediate 2 wks preceding the study.
(11) Female subjects will be excluded if either clinical history is suspicious for, or laboratory evaluation is consistent with pregnancy.
(12) Subjects unwilling to undergo HIV testing, unless enrolling in Part IIa of the study.
(13) Subjects who test HIV positive.
(14) Patients with para- and/or ferro-magnetic prosthesis/implants/fragments in their body will be excluded from the study.
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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