脑电图
心理学
头皮
神经科学
同步脑电与功能磁共振
镜像
发作性
非快速眼动睡眠
癫痫
听力学
皮质(解剖学)
默认模式网络
认知
医学
解剖
沟通
作者
Damiana Bergamo,Giacomo Handjaras,Flavia Petruso,Francesca Talami,Emiliano Ricciardi,Francesca Benuzzi,Anna Elisabetta Vaudano,Stefano Meletti,Giulio Bernardi,Monica Betta
标识
DOI:10.1016/j.sleep.2023.12.001
摘要
Studies using scalp EEG have shown that slow waves (0.5–4 Hz), the most prominent hallmark of NREM sleep, undergo relevant changes from childhood to adulthood, mirroring brain structural modifications and the acquisition of cognitive skills. Here we used simultaneous EEG-fMRI to investigate the cortical and subcortical correlates of slow waves in school-age children and determine their relative developmental changes. We analyzed data from 14 school-age children with self-limited focal epilepsy of childhood who fell asleep during EEG-fMRI recordings. Brain regions associated with slow-wave occurrence were identified using a voxel-wise regression that also modelled interictal epileptic discharges and sleep spindles. At the group level, a mixed-effects linear model was used. The results were qualitatively compared with those obtained from 2 adolescents with epilepsy and 17 healthy adults. Slow waves were associated with hemodynamic-signal decreases in bilateral somatomotor areas. Such changes extended more posteriorly relative to those in adults. Moreover, the involvement of areas belonging to the default mode network changes as a function of age. No significant hemodynamic responses were observed in subcortical structures. However, we identified a significant correlation between age and thalamic hemodynamic changes. Present findings indicate that the somatomotor cortex may have a key role in slow-wave expression throughout the lifespan. At the same time, they are consistent with a posterior-to-anterior shift in slow-wave distribution mirroring brain maturational changes. Finally, our results suggest that slow-wave changes may not reflect only neocortical modifications but also the maturation of subcortical structures, including the thalamus.
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