Human NREM Sleep Promotes Brain-Wide Vasomotor and Respiratory Pulsations

Author:

Helakari HetaORCID,Korhonen Vesa,Holst Sebastian C.,Piispala Johanna,Kallio MikaORCID,Väyrynen Tommi,Huotari Niko,Raitamaa Lauri,Tuunanen JohannaORCID,Kananen JanneORCID,Järvelä Matti,Tuovinen TimoORCID,Raatikainen Ville,Borchardt Viola,Kinnunen Hannu,Nedergaard Maiken,Kiviniemi VesaORCID

Abstract

The physiological underpinnings of the necessity of sleep remain uncertain. Recent evidence suggests that sleep increases the convection of cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) and promotes the export of interstitial solutes, thus providing a framework to explain why all vertebrate species require sleep. Cardiovascular, respiratory and vasomotor brain pulsations have each been shown to drive CSF flow along perivascular spaces, yet it is unknown how such pulsations may change during sleep in humans. To investigate these pulsation phenomena in relation to sleep, we simultaneously recorded fast fMRI, magnetic resonance encephalography (MREG), and electroencephalography (EEG) signals in a group of healthy volunteers. We quantified sleep-related changes in the signal frequency distributions by spectral entropy analysis and calculated the strength of the physiological (vasomotor, respiratory, and cardiac) brain pulsations by power sum analysis in 15 subjects (age 26.5 ± 4.2 years, 6 females). Finally, we identified spatial similarities between EEG slow oscillation (0.2–2 Hz) power and MREG pulsations. Compared with wakefulness, nonrapid eye movement (NREM) sleep was characterized by reduced spectral entropy and increased brain pulsation intensity. These effects were most pronounced in posterior brain areas for very low-frequency (≤0.1 Hz) vasomotor pulsations but were also evident brain-wide for respiratory pulsations, and to a lesser extent for cardiac brain pulsations. There was increased EEG slow oscillation power in brain regions spatially overlapping with those showing sleep-related MREG pulsation changes. We suggest that reduced spectral entropy and enhanced pulsation intensity are characteristic of NREM sleep. With our findings of increased power of slow oscillation, the present results support the proposition that sleep promotes fluid transport in human brain.SIGNIFICANCE STATEMENTWe report that the spectral power of physiological brain pulsation mechanisms driven by vasomotor, respiration, and cardiac rhythms in human brain increase during sleep, extending previous observations of their association with glymphatic brain clearance during sleep in rodents. The magnitudes of increased pulsations follow the rank order of vasomotor greater than respiratory greater than cardiac pulsations, with correspondingly declining spatial extents. Spectral entropy, previously known as vigilance and as an anesthesia metric, decreased during NREM sleep compared with the awake state in very low and respiratory frequencies, indicating reduced signal complexity. An EEG slow oscillation power increase occurring in the early sleep phase (NREM 1–2) spatially overlapped with pulsation changes, indicating reciprocal mechanisms between those measures.

Funder

Uniogs/MRC Oulu DP-Grant

Pohjois-Suomen Terveydenhuollon tukisäätiö

JAES Foundation

Academy of Finland and Aivosäätiö TERVA grant

Academy of Finland Grant

The SalWe Research Program for Mind and Body

The Finnish Medical Foundation

Finnish Neurological Foundation

KEVO grants from Oulu University hospital

Orion Research Foundation sr

Medical Research Center (MRC) -Oulu

Maire Taponen Foundation sr

Finnish Brain Foundation sr

Instrumentarium Science Foundation sr

The University of Oulu Scholarship Foundation

Publisher

Society for Neuroscience

Subject

General Neuroscience

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