6533b856fe1ef96bd12b32be

RESEARCH PRODUCT

Limbic activity in slow wave sleep in a healthy subject with alpha–delta sleep

Roberto D. Pascual-marquiKlaus MannBernhard J. ConnemannJoachim Röschke

subject

AdultMaleSleep Stagesmedicine.diagnostic_testPolysomnographyNeuroscience (miscellaneous)Sleep spindlePolysomnographyAnatomyElectroencephalographyAlpha RhythmPsychiatry and Mental healthDelta RhythmDelta RhythmLimbic SystemmedicineHumansCingulum (brain)Radiology Nuclear Medicine and imagingSleep StagesSleepK-complexPsychologyNeuroscienceSlow-wave sleep

description

All-night electroencephalographic (EEG) activity was recorded in a healthy subject with known alpha-delta sleep. Recordings were made from all 19 of the 10/20 system electrode sites, and low resolution electromagnetic tomography (LORETA) was used to estimate intracerebral current densities. Sleep stages were compared within classical frequency bands by statistical parametric mapping (SPM). With the onset of sleep, occipital alpha abated. With increasing depth of sleep, alpha power increased in a region comprising the left frontal lobe, the anterior and parietal cingulum, and the anterior and medial right front lobe. In slow wave sleep (SWS), frontal alpha power was much greater than in wakefulness. The maximum of frontal alpha power of SWS was localised symmetrically in the left and right anterior cingulum. The observed alpha activity was different from the occipital alpha characteristic of wakefulness; it was a distinct activity of separate origin. The anterior limbic lobes seemed to play an active part in SWS in this healthy volunteer with an alpha-delta sleep pattern.

https://doi.org/10.1016/s0925-4927(01)00094-4