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- Muhammad Fuad Bangash, Ailiang Xie, James B Skatrud, Kevin J Reichmuth, Steven R Barczi, and Barbara J Morgan.
- Department of Medicine, University of Wisconsin-Madison, 53706-1532, USA.
- Sleep. 2008 Mar 1;31(3):321-7.
Study ObjectiveTo determine the effect of arousal from sleep on cerebral blood flow velocity (CBFV) in relation to associated ventilatory and systemic hemodynamic changes.ParticipantsEleven healthy individuals (6 men, 5 women).MeasurementsPulsed Doppler ultrasonography was used to measure CBFV in the middle cerebral artery with simultaneous measurements of sleep state (EEG, EOG, and EMG), ventilation (inductance plethysmography), heart rate (ECG), and arterial pressure (finger plethysmography). Arousals were induced by auditory tones (range: 40-80 dB; duration: 0.5 sec). Cardiovascular responses were examined beat-by-beat for 30 sec before and 30 sec after auditory tones.ResultsDuring NREM sleep, CBFV declined following arousals (-15% +/- 2%; group mean +/- SEM) with a nadir at 9 sec after the auditory tone, followed by a gradual return to baseline. Mean arterial pressure (MAP; +20% +/- 1%) and heart rate (HR; +17% +/- 2%) increased with peaks at 5 and 3 sec after the auditory tone, respectively. Minute ventilation (VE) was increased (+35% +/- 10%) for 2 breaths after the auditory tone. In contrast, during REM sleep, CBFV increased following arousals (+15% +/- 3%) with a peak at 3 sec. MAP (+17% +/- 2%) and HR (+15% +/- 2%) increased during arousals from REM sleep with peaks at 5 and 3 sec post tone. VE increased (+16% +/- 7%) in a smaller, more sustained manner during arousals from REM sleep.ConclusionsArousals from NREM sleep transiently reduce CBFV, whereas arousals from REM sleep transiently increase CBFV, despite qualitatively and quantitatively similar increases in MAP, HR, and VE in the two sleep states.
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