EEG, Sleep and Circadian Rhythms Flashcards
What part of the brain is responsible for the inhibatory process causing sleep?
The pons
Activity originates in the reticular formation of the brainstem - known to be losely associated with controlling the state of consciousness
Where does the reticular formatino send its projections?
To the thalamus and higher cortical areas
Describe the nerves in the reticular formation?
Serotonergic - denoting a nerve ending that releases and is stimulated by serotonin.
What evidence suggests that seratonin is responsible for sleep induction?
Drugs that block serotonin formation inhibit sleep suggesting serotonin must be critical to sleep induction. Possibly because serotonin is a precursor of melatonin
Which part of the hypothalamus shows circadian rhythm?
Suprchiasmatic nuclei
The hypothalamus is thought to be involved with the induction of sleep
What effect does the suprachiasmatic nuclei have on the pineal gland?
Stimulates the pineal gland to release melatonin - corresponds with feelings of sleepiness in humans.
What is the hormone responsible for wakefulness produced by the hypothalamus?
Orexin
What is the condition associated with defective orexin signalling?
Narcolepsy
How does the ascending reticular activating system and the sleep centres in the reticular formation interact during wakefulness?
Excitatory neurones of the ascending reticular activating system are no longer held in inhibition by the sleep centres
This stimulates excitatory pathways both the CNS and PNS
Which then reduces the inhibition of the sleep centres and the cycle continues
What happens when the orexin producing cells fatigue?
Inhibitory, peptide signals from the Sleep Centres in the Reticular Formation likely take over and rapidly dominate the weakening excitatory signals leading to rapid progression into the sleep state. The opposite is believed to happen during waking – the inhibitory cells fatigue and the excitatory cells are reinvigorated.
How do you assess consciousness in an awake person?
- Look at their behaviour, general alertness, speech patterns, speech content, reading, writing and calculating skills. Spell words backwards or count backwards,
- Record patterns of brain activity using ElectroEncepheloGram (EEG). EEG uses electrodes placed on the scalp to record activity of underlying neurons.
What does frequency vary with on an EEG?
Neuronal excitation
List 5 states of increasing frequency on an EEG?
Anaesthesia
Sleep
Awake - relaxed
Awake - alert
Tonic - clonic epilepsy
What are the 4 main types of wave pattern on an EEG?
Aphpa
Beta
Theta
Delta
What are a waves and when are they seen?
HIgh frequency - high amplitude
Seen in the awake - relaxed state
What are beta waves and what causes them to come about?
Beta waves are high frequency and low amplitude asynchronous waves
Come about as a result of awake - alert state of consciousness
Why are beta waves low apmlitude?
Brain is producing many signals, opposing polarities of singals cancel each other out - they do not get recorded on an EEG
What are theta waves and when do they appear?
Theta waves are low frequency, but vary enormously in amplitude
Happen during times of emotional stress and frustration in adults. They also occur during sleep in both adults and children
What are delta waves and when do they occur?
Very low frequency but high amplitude.
They occur in deep sleep
What is stage 1 sleep cycle?
Slow eye movements, light sleep, easily roused
Theta waves
What is stage 2 sleep cycle?
Eye movements stop
Frequency slows down
EEG shows bursts of waves called sleep spindles
What is stage 3 sleep cycle?
Delta waves interspersed with short episodes of faster waves
Spindle activity declines