Higher frontal EEG synchronization in young women with major depression: a marker for increased homeostatic sleep pressure?
Higher frontal EEG synchronization in young women with major depression: a marker for increased homeostatic sleep pressure?
Study Objectives: Major depressive disorder (MDD) is often associated with disturbances in circadian and/or sleep-wake dependent processes, which both regulate daytime energy and sleepiness levels.
Design: Analysis of continuous electroencephalographic (EEG) recordings during 40 h of extended wakefulness under constant routine conditions. Artifact-free EEG samples derived from 12 locations were subjected to spectral analysis. Additionally, half-hourly ratings of subjective tension and sleepiness levels and salivary melatonin measurements were collected.
Setting: Centre for Chronobiology, Psychiatric Hospitals of the University of Basel, Switzerland.
Participants: Eight young healthy women and 8 young untreated women with MDD.
Interventions:
N/A.
Measurements and Results: MDD women exhibited higher frontal low-frequency (FLA) EEG activity (0.5-5.0 Hz) during extended wakefulness than controls, particularly during the night. Enhanced FLA was paralleled by higher levels of subjective sleepiness and tension. In MDD women, overall FLA levels correlated positively with depression scores. The timing of melatonin onset did not significantly differ between the two groups, but the nocturnal secretion of salivary melatonin was significantly attenuated in MDD women.
Conclusions: Our data imply that young women with MDD live on a higher homeostatic sleep pressure level, as indexed by enhanced FLA during wakefulness. Its positive correlation with depression scores indicates a possible functional relationship. High FLA could reflect a use-dependent phenomenon in depression (enhanced cognitive rumination or tension) and/or an attenuated circadian arousal signal.
1699–1706
Birchler-Pedross, Angelina
c1d4bc9c-5ffa-4f15-ba6d-2c477a49ec42
Frey, Sylvia
70fd2573-43df-4513-ab64-35b421ff4729
Chellappa, Sarah Laxhmi
516582b5-3cba-4644-86c9-14c91a4510f2
Götz, Thomas
476691a8-d896-409c-8073-386508c7368b
Brunner, Patrick
08714219-251f-42ba-9963-838793826d15
Knoblauch, Vera
88072dbd-a484-4a60-b887-ff6300899b21
Wirz-Justice, Anna
d27caf13-6f36-48a8-bbb5-11295c6ad2d1
Cajochen, Christian
f605e720-e417-45dc-9b5c-244b1a1d6265
1 December 2011
Birchler-Pedross, Angelina
c1d4bc9c-5ffa-4f15-ba6d-2c477a49ec42
Frey, Sylvia
70fd2573-43df-4513-ab64-35b421ff4729
Chellappa, Sarah Laxhmi
516582b5-3cba-4644-86c9-14c91a4510f2
Götz, Thomas
476691a8-d896-409c-8073-386508c7368b
Brunner, Patrick
08714219-251f-42ba-9963-838793826d15
Knoblauch, Vera
88072dbd-a484-4a60-b887-ff6300899b21
Wirz-Justice, Anna
d27caf13-6f36-48a8-bbb5-11295c6ad2d1
Cajochen, Christian
f605e720-e417-45dc-9b5c-244b1a1d6265
Birchler-Pedross, Angelina, Frey, Sylvia, Chellappa, Sarah Laxhmi, Götz, Thomas, Brunner, Patrick, Knoblauch, Vera, Wirz-Justice, Anna and Cajochen, Christian
(2011)
Higher frontal EEG synchronization in young women with major depression: a marker for increased homeostatic sleep pressure?
Sleep, 34 (12), .
(doi:10.5665/sleep.1440).
Abstract
Study Objectives: Major depressive disorder (MDD) is often associated with disturbances in circadian and/or sleep-wake dependent processes, which both regulate daytime energy and sleepiness levels.
Design: Analysis of continuous electroencephalographic (EEG) recordings during 40 h of extended wakefulness under constant routine conditions. Artifact-free EEG samples derived from 12 locations were subjected to spectral analysis. Additionally, half-hourly ratings of subjective tension and sleepiness levels and salivary melatonin measurements were collected.
Setting: Centre for Chronobiology, Psychiatric Hospitals of the University of Basel, Switzerland.
Participants: Eight young healthy women and 8 young untreated women with MDD.
Interventions:
N/A.
Measurements and Results: MDD women exhibited higher frontal low-frequency (FLA) EEG activity (0.5-5.0 Hz) during extended wakefulness than controls, particularly during the night. Enhanced FLA was paralleled by higher levels of subjective sleepiness and tension. In MDD women, overall FLA levels correlated positively with depression scores. The timing of melatonin onset did not significantly differ between the two groups, but the nocturnal secretion of salivary melatonin was significantly attenuated in MDD women.
Conclusions: Our data imply that young women with MDD live on a higher homeostatic sleep pressure level, as indexed by enhanced FLA during wakefulness. Its positive correlation with depression scores indicates a possible functional relationship. High FLA could reflect a use-dependent phenomenon in depression (enhanced cognitive rumination or tension) and/or an attenuated circadian arousal signal.
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Published date: 1 December 2011
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Local EPrints ID: 480099
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/480099
ISSN: 0161-8105
PURE UUID: d9b6e8b3-9d9d-4bb2-a289-c5afc70f3a78
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Date deposited: 01 Aug 2023 16:48
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 04:21
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Author:
Angelina Birchler-Pedross
Author:
Sylvia Frey
Author:
Sarah Laxhmi Chellappa
Author:
Thomas Götz
Author:
Patrick Brunner
Author:
Vera Knoblauch
Author:
Anna Wirz-Justice
Author:
Christian Cajochen
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