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Rapid eye movement sleep

About: Rapid eye movement sleep is a research topic. Over the lifetime, 3740 publications have been published within this topic receiving 183415 citations. The topic is also known as: REM sleep & REMS.


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Journal ArticleDOI
01 Nov 2005-Chest
TL;DR: The results show that neither clinical history nor daytime sleepiness differentiate patients with REM SDB from non-REM SDB patients, which may suggest that REM-related SDB is a part of the spectrum of SDB.

133 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The clinical and pathophysiological aspects of cataplexy are described, optimal therapeutic management strategies are outlined, and antidepressants and γ-hydroxybutyrate being the most effective treatments are outlined.
Abstract: Cataplexy is the pathognomonic symptom of narcolepsy, and is the sudden uncontrollable onset of skeletal muscle paralysis or weakness during wakefulness. Cataplexy is incapacitating because it leaves the individual awake but temporarily either fully or partially paralyzed. Occurring spontaneously, cataplexy is typically triggered by strong positive emotions such as laughter and is often underdiagnosed owing to a variable disease course in terms of age of onset, presenting symptoms, triggers, frequency and intensity of attacks. This disorder occurs almost exclusively in patients with depletion of hypothalamic orexin neurons. One pathogenetic mechanism that has been hypothesized for cataplexy is the activation, during wakefulness, of brainstem circuitry that normally induces muscle tone suppression in rapid eye movement sleep. Muscle weakness during cataplexy is caused by decreased excitation of noradrenergic neurons and increased inhibition of skeletal motor neurons by γ-aminobutyric acid-releasing or glycinergic neurons. The amygdala and medial prefrontal cortex contain neural pathways through which positive emotions probably trigger cataplectic attacks. Despite major advances in understanding disease mechanisms in cataplexy, therapeutic management is largely symptomatic, with antidepressants and γ-hydroxybutyrate being the most effective treatments. This Review describes the clinical and pathophysiological aspects of cataplexy, and outlines optimal therapeutic management strategies.

133 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
01 Aug 1994-Sleep
TL;DR: In the last 3 hours of sleep versus the first 3 hours, arousals occurred less frequently, required more tones to produce, resulted in shorter durations and in fewer sleep stage changes, except for REM sleep where the converse was the case.
Abstract: Thirty-six healthy young men and women (age range 21-35 years) were studied in an experimental model of sleep fragmentation. On 2 nights sleep was disrupted by presenting tones to produce brief electroencephalogram (EEG) arousals (without shortening sleep time) and daytime function was assessed the following day with the Multiple Sleep Latency Test and a divided attention performance test. The fragmentation of sleep produced significant disruption of nocturnal sleep and reduced daytime alertness. Adaptation in EEG-defined arousals occurred from the 1st to the 2nd night of fragmentation. Threshold (measured indirectly) characteristics of EEG-defined arousals were somewhat different than those of previous studies requiring behavioral awakening. The percent of tone series producing arousal, number of tones necessary for arousal and duration of the arousal all reflected heightened thresholds in stage 3/4 and rapid eye movement (REM) sleep compared to stage 1 and stage 2 sleep. In the last 3 hours of sleep versus the first 3 hours, arousals occurred less frequently, required more tones to produce, resulted in shorter durations and in fewer sleep stage changes, except for REM sleep where the converse was the case.

133 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
J. De Koninck1, Dominique Lorrain1, G. Christ1, G. Proulx1, D. Coulombe1 
TL;DR: There was a positive and significant correlation between language learning efficiency and increases in the percentage of rapid eye movement (REM) sleep from pre-course to course periods, which suggests that learning performance may be an important factor in the relationship between information processing and REM sleep.

133 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In both groups of infants, prone body position was associated with a significant increase in sleep duration and in non-rapid eye movement sleep and a significant decrease in number of arousals and in their duration.
Abstract: Objective. To evaluate the potential relation between body position and sleep characteristics in normal infants. Patients. Two groups of 3-month-old healthy infants were evaluated: 40 infants who usually slept supine, and 40 who usually slept prone. The two groups were matched for gender, gestational age, postnatal age, birth weight, and total recording time. Recording techniques. The 80 infants were studied polygraphically during one night in the pediatric sleep laboratory. They were allowed to fall asleep in their usual sleep position, and every 3 hours were gently turned from prone to supine, or from supine to prone. Results. In each group, 6 infants were excluded from the analysis, because they woke up after having been turned over. In both groups, no significant difference was seen between the prone and the supine body positions for the following variables: number of sleep state changes; number of gross body movements; percent of rapid eye movement sleep; saturation with oxygen, arterial blood levels; number and duration of acid esophageal reflux; rectal temperature; mean respiratory rates; water evaporation rates from the forehead skin; and number or duration of central or of obstructive apneas. In both groups of infants, prone body position was associated with a significant increase in sleep duration (+ 6%) and in non-rapid eye movement sleep (+25%) and a significant decrease in number of arousals (–40%) and in their duration (–43%). Conclusions. No explanation has been found for the sleep-promoting effect of prone body positioning. The finding could be of interest to the study of infants9 sleep quality, as well as to the potential relation between body positions and sudden death during sleep.

133 citations


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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers in the topic in previous years
YearPapers
202353
2022115
2021116
2020107
201995
201883