![]() | |||
|
Genomics
Epigenetics
Sleep Medicine Health Care Policy Bacteria May Be Early Signal of Oral Cancer Step Taken Toward $1,000 Personal Genome Fat Cell Protein Seen to Cause Insulin Resistance Department Chair, Assistant Dean Named at HSPH School Welcomes Incoming Students New Full and Endowed Professorships AIDS Vaccine Program Gains $19m Grant Surgeon-Journalist Plies Both Trades in Iraqi War Zone |
SLEEP MEDICINE
Heart Tracings Reveal Sleep Patterns for Health and DiseaseStable and Unstable Sleep Found Distinct from Traditional Non-REM Stages During the most restful sleep, the resting heart speeds up and slows down slightly with each breath in and out. But when the heart rhythm drops out of sync with breath-to-breath respiration, slumber becomes more fitful and tiring.
An electrocardiogram could provide more information on sleep stability and quality than a dozen monitoring devices, say (clockwise from top left) Chung-Kang Peng, Robert Thomas, Joseph Mietus, and Ary Goldberger.
“This is a distal but clean biomarker that tells us if the system is oscillating in synchrony with each breath or over multiple breaths,” said first author Robert Thomas, head of the BID sleep laboratory and HMS instructor in medicine. “This reflects stable and unstable sleep behavior. Disease expands the unstable behavior of the system. The goal of treatment is to enhance the stable behavior.” If validated by further studies, the ECG as a measure of sleep stability may be an easier and less expensive way of diagnosing and guiding the therapy of sleep disorders. The work also lends credence to a nonconventional way of thinking about the stages that make up most of a good night’s sleep, known as non–rapid-eye-movement (non-REM) sleep. The researchers’ ECG analysis revealed two states of non-REM sleep, stable and unstable. In contrast, the traditional staging system divides non-REM sleep into four grades ranging from light to deep sleep, which correlate with the effort needed to wake someone up. The sleep staging standards are now being reevaluated (see sidebar).
Heart of Sleep “The breathing and heart rate control turn out to have a profound connection to what’s going on in the brain during sleep,” said senior author Ary Goldberger, director of the Margret and H.A. Rey Institute for Nonlinear Dynamics in Medicine at BID and an HMS professor of medicine. “It ratifies the growing consensus of the importance of cross talk and systems biology. You have one set of conversations going on between the heart and lungs and nervous system in health. In pathology, the frequency and tone of that conversation literally changes and you see a new conversation emerge.” Thomas began to wonder about non-REM sleep about five years ago. He was becoming both intrigued and frustrated by spontaneous flips back and forth between stable and unstable patterns of sleep in patient after patient. Bad sleep could suddenly change to good and vice versa without any intervention and while remaining in the same grade of non-REM sleep. Another Look at Non-REM Meanwhile, co-author Joseph Mietus, a BID bioengineer, had shelved an initially disappointing algorithm he had devised to deconstruct a single jagged ECG plot to show the link between the heart rate and breathing dynamics. He had hoped it would help diagnose sleep apnea, but he could not correlate his results with the classic non-REM sleep staging standards. Colleague and co-author Chung-Kang “C.K.” Peng, a statistical physicist and co-director of the Rey lab, thought the approach had promise and urged him to pursue it further.
But because Goldberger directs PhysioNet, a research resource funded by the National Institutes of Health, his group felt a responsibility to assist Thomas, an NIH-funded researcher. So Mietus ran a sample dataset through his algorithm, expecting it would probably be a dead end. “It turned out to be enormously exciting,” Goldberger said. They refined
the technique with 70 sleep studies on patients from BID and other accredited
sleep centers. The stable and unstable sleep patterns overlapped, but were
not identical to, the CAP/non-CAP brain wave patterns. When they retested
the trained algorithm on data from 15 healthy people who were part of a different
study, they discovered that stable and non-stable sleep were a feature of
normal sleep in healthy individuals.
The landscape of sleep. The spectrogram above, created by Joseph Mietus, demonstrates the difference between stable and unstable sleep. This nocturnal electrocardiogram of a healthy man, 24, shows normal fluctuations between stable (top range) and unstable (bottom range) sleep throughout the night. The top mountain range nearly disappears in people with uncorrected sleep disorders. Stable and unstable sleep patterns appear to be independent of classic sleep staging for the same person, shown in the upper bar: wake, rapid eye movement (REM), and non-REM stages 1 through 4. (Courtesy Joseph Mietus) Mietus devised a quick way to visualize the results using a “sleep spectrogram” with two distinct mountain-range bands. Healthy people show more stable sleep; people with untreated sleep disorders show more unstable sleep. The stable and unstable sleep patterns do not correlate with conventional non-REM sleep staging, suggesting a complementary new view of sleep regulation and physiology. “We are not proposing a new sleep classification system,” Thomas said. “We’re saying this is how non-REM sleep works. The field can decide what to do with the new information and how to use this new tool.” |
||