期刊文献+

Perchance to dream? Primordial motor activity patterns in vertebrates from fish to mammals: their prenatal origin, postnatal persistence during sleep, and pathological reemergence during REM sleep behavior disorder 被引量:1

Perchance to dream? Primordial motor activity patterns in vertebrates from fish to mammals: their prenatal origin, postnatal persistence during sleep, and pathological reemergence during REM sleep behavior disorder
原文传递
导出
摘要 An overview is presented of the literature dealing with sleep-like motility and concomitant neuronal activity patterns throughout the life cycle in vertebrates, ectothermic as well as endothermic. Spontaneous, periodically modulated, neurogenic bursts of non-purposive movements are a universal feature of larval and prenatal behavior, which in endothermic animals (i.e. birds and mammals) continue to occur periodically throughout life. Since the entire body musculature is involved in ever-shifting combinations, it is proposed that these spontaneously active periods be designated as 'rapid-BODY-movement' (RBM) sleep. The term 'rapid-EYE- movement (REM) sleep', characterized by attenuated muscle contractions and reduced tonus, can then be reserved for sleep at later stages of development. Mature stages of development in which sustained muscle atonia is combined with 'paradoxical arousal' of cortical neuronal firing patterns indisputably represent the evolutionarily most recent aspect of REM sleep, but more research with ectothermic vertebrates, such as fish, amphibians and reptiles, is needed before it can be concluded (as many prematurely have) that RBM is absent in these species. Evidence suggests a link between RBM sleep in early development and the clinical condition known as 'REM sleep behavior disorder (RBD)', which is characterized by the resurgence of periodic bouts of quasi-fetal motility that closely resemble RBM sleep. Early developmental neuromotor risk factors for RBD in humans also point to a relationship between RBM sleep and RBD. An overview is presented of the literature dealing with sleep-like motility and concomitant neuronal activity patterns throughout the life cycle in vertebrates, ectothermic as well as endothermic. Spontaneous, periodically modulated, neurogenic bursts of non-purposive movements are a universal feature of larval and prenatal behavior, which in endothermic animals (i.e. birds and mammals) continue to occur periodically throughout life. Since the entire body musculature is involved in ever-shifting combinations, it is proposed that these spontaneously active periods be designated as 'rapid-BODY-movement' (RBM) sleep. The term 'rapid-EYE- movement (REM) sleep', characterized by attenuated muscle contractions and reduced tonus, can then be reserved for sleep at later stages of development. Mature stages of development in which sustained muscle atonia is combined with 'paradoxical arousal' of cortical neuronal firing patterns indisputably represent the evolutionarily most recent aspect of REM sleep, but more research with ectothermic vertebrates, such as fish, amphibians and reptiles, is needed before it can be concluded (as many prematurely have) that RBM is absent in these species. Evidence suggests a link between RBM sleep in early development and the clinical condition known as 'REM sleep behavior disorder (RBD)', which is characterized by the resurgence of periodic bouts of quasi-fetal motility that closely resemble RBM sleep. Early developmental neuromotor risk factors for RBD in humans also point to a relationship between RBM sleep and RBD.
出处 《Neuroscience Bulletin》 SCIE CAS CSCD 2015年第6期649-662,共14页 神经科学通报(英文版)
关键词 SLEEP development evolution spike-train analysis spontaneous motility neuronal networks NEUROPLASTICITY REM sleep behavior disorder sleep development evolution spike-train analysis spontaneous motility neuronal networks neuroplasticity REM sleep behavior disorder
  • 相关文献

二级参考文献122

  • 1Comer MA, Crain SM. Patterns of spontaneous bioelectric activity during maturation in cultures of fetal rodent medulla and spinal cord tissues. J Neurobiol 1972, 3: 25-45.
  • 2Takizawa N. Integral multiple interspike intervals of spontaneous activity in isolated medulla oblongata of the frog. Brain Res 1981, 212: 466-469.
  • 3Weiss PA. Deplantation of fragments of the nervous system in am- phibians: central reorganization and the formation of nerves. J Exp Zool 1950, 113: 317-462.
  • 4Comer MA. Localization of capacities for functional development in the neural plate ofXenopus laevis. J Comp Neurol 1964, 123: 243-256.
  • 5Steriade M. The K-complex: its slow (<lHz) rhythmicity and relation to delta waves. Neurology 1997, 49: 952-959.
  • 6Terzano MG, Parrino L, Spaggiari MC. The cyclic alternating pattern sequences in the dynamic organization of sleep. Electroen- cephalogr Clin Neurophysiol 1988, 69: 437-447.
  • 7McCormick DA. Neurotransmitter actions in the thalamus and ce- rebral cortex and their role in neuromodulation of thalamo-cortical circuitry. Prog Neurobiol 1992, 39: 337-388.
  • 8Achermann P, Borbely AA. Low-frequency (<1 Hz) oscillations in the human sleep-electroencephalogram. Neuroscience 1997, 81: 213-222.
  • 9Olbrich E, Achermann P. Analysis of the temporal organization of sleep spindles in the human EEG using a phenomenological mode- ling approach. J Biol Phys 2008, 34: 341-349.
  • 10Baker RE, Corner MA, van Pelt. Spontaneous neuronal discharge patterns in developing organotypic mega-co-cultures of neonatal rat cerebral cortex. Brain Res 2006, 1101: 29-35.

同被引文献4

引证文献1

二级引证文献2

相关作者

内容加载中请稍等...

相关机构

内容加载中请稍等...

相关主题

内容加载中请稍等...

浏览历史

内容加载中请稍等...
;
使用帮助 返回顶部