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Measuring sleep and neurobiological functional parameters in patients with obstructive sleep apnea

Doctor of Philosophy (Medicine) / Sleepiness is an important source of morbidity in the community, with potentially catastrophic consequences of occupational or driving injuries or accidents. Although many measures of sleepiness exist, there is no gold standard. The electroencephalograph (EEG) has been studied as an indicator of sleep pressure in the waking organism, or sleep depth. A mathematical model has been developed, relating the observed EEG to interactions between groups of neurons in the cortex and thalamus (Robinson, Rennie, Rowe, O'Connor, & Gordon, 2005; Robinson, Rennie, & Wright, 1997). These interactions are thought to be important in the transition from wake to sleep. Sleepiness is common in obstructive sleep apnea (OSA). The measurement of sleepiness would have great utility in quantifying the disease burden, measuring treatment response, or determining fitness for work or driving. This study will evaluate parameters derived from the EEG mathematical model as a measure of sleepiness. It is divided into the following four parts: 1. Subjects with likely OSA based on symptoms and demographics from an international database were compared with matched non-OSA controls. The OSA group showed deficits in executive function and abnormalities on evoked response potential testing. 2. Outcomes from a cross-sectional study in a sleep-clinic OSA population were aggregated by factor analysis into a five summary variables relevant to sleepiness: subjective sleepiness, mood & anxiety, memory & learning, driving, and executive functioning. 3. EEG mathematical model parameters from wake EEG recordings were related to the five summary outcomes. Executive function correlated with a parameter Z, representing the negative feedback loop between the thalamic reticular nucleus and the thalamocortical relay nuclei. 4. EEG model parameters during first NREM sleep cycle of 8 subjects with regular sleep architecture were studied. Net cortical excitation (parameter X) is predicted to increase across the cycle, while there was, as predicted, a greater inhibitory effect of the thalamic reticular nucleus upon thalamocortical relay cells (parameter Z). In this preliminary assessment, EEG model parameters reflecting thalamocortical interactions are sensitive to prefrontal lobe tasks such as executive function, which are known to be vulnerable to sleep loss and sleepiness, and these parameters also show variation with increasing sleep depth.

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:ADTP/283445
Date January 2008
CreatorsWong, Keith Keat Huat
PublisherUniversity of Sydney.
Source SetsAustraliasian Digital Theses Program
Detected LanguageEnglish
RightsThe author retains copyright of this thesis., http://www.library.usyd.edu.au/copyright.html

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