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Jeffrey Ellenbogen, MGH:
Spindle brain waves blockade noise during sleep
August 11, 2010
People
who have trouble sleeping in noisy environments often resort to
strategies like earplugs or noise-canceling headphones that muffle the
sound, but a new study from investigators at Massachusetts General
Hospital (MGH), the Brigham and Woman's Hospital (BWH) and Cambridge
Health Alliance (CHA) may lead to ways to block disturbing sounds within
the brain. In their report in the August 10 issue of Current Biology,
the team reports finding a brain-wave pattern, reflecting activity of a
key structure, that predicts the ease with which sleep can be disrupted
by noise.
"We wanted to investigate what the brain does to promote stable sleep,
even in the face of noise, and why some people are better at staying
asleep than others," explains Jeffrey Ellenbogen, MD, chief of the MGH
Division of Sleep Medicine. "Understanding the tools and techniques the
brain naturally uses could help us harness and expand those responses to
help stay asleep in noisy environments."
Upon entering the brain, most sensory information, including sound,
passes through a deep-brain structure called the thalamus on its way to
the cortex where signals are perceived. Communication between these
structures continues during sleep and is reflected by fluctuations in
the brain's electrical field, producing rhythmic patterns detected
through electroencephalography (EEG). Typical EEG patterns are used to
distinguish stages of sleep, and in the second and third stages, slow
brain wave patterns are interspersed with brief, rapid pulses called
spindles.
Previous research suggested that brain activity producing spindles,
which only appear during sleep, also keeps sensory information from
passing through the thalamus, a hypothesis the current study was
designed to test. The team enrolled 12 healthy, adult volunteers, each
of whom spent three consecutive nights in the MGH sleep lab. EEG reading
were taken throughout each night, the first of which was quiet. During
the next two nights, participants were regularly subjected to increasing
levels of noise until their EEGs indicated they were no longer asleep.
Analyzing the results revealed that each participant maintained a
consistent, night-to-night spindle rate and that those with higher rates
on the quiet night were less likely to be aroused on the noisy nights.
Participants often were not aware that their sleep had been interrupted,
Ellenbogen notes, indicating that environmental noise can have a greater
impact on sleep quality than an individual may realize.
"We were surprised by the magnitude of the effect," he explains. "We
designed the study to follow participants for three nights to capture a
lot of data, but the effect was so pronounced that we could see it after
a single 'noisy' night. Now we want to study behavioral techniques,
drugs or devices that may enhance sleep spindles and see if they can
help people stay asleep when confronted with noise and maintain
otherwise healthy, natural sleep."
An assistant professor of Neurology at Harvard Medical School,
Ellenbogen hopes this work will be particularly helpful to hospital
patients, who are under stress and need quality sleep but are surrounded
by often-noisy equipment. "We need to work with hospitals around the
country to develop solutions, targeting sounds like alarms to the people
who need to hear them and not those who don't. Brain-based solutions
like enhancing sleep spindles will likely have a role in these
strategies."
Lead
author of the Current Biology article is Thien Thahn Dang-Vu, MD, PhD,
MGH Neurology. Additional co-authors are Scott McKinney, MGH Neurology:
Orfeu Buxton, PhD, Brigham and Woman's Hospital; and Jo Solet, PhD,
Cambridge Health Alliance. The study was supported by grants to Dr.
Solet from the Academy of Architecture for Health, the Facilities
Guidelines Institute and the Center for Health Design.
Massachusetts General Hospital, established in 1811, is the original and
largest teaching hospital of Harvard Medical School. The MGH conducts
the largest hospital-based research program in the United States, with
an annual research budget of more than $600 million and major research
centers in AIDS, cardiovascular research, cancer, computational and
integrative biology, cutaneous biology, human genetics, medical imaging,
neurodegenerative disorders, regenerative medicine, systems biology,
transplantation biology and photomedicine. |