Reciprocal first night effect on rhythmic and non‐rhythmic oromotor episodes in moderate to severe primary sleep bruxism: A retrospective physiological study

Author:

Haraki Shingo1,Tsujisaka Akiko1,Shiraishi Yuki2,Toyota Risa3,Katagiri Ayano4,Toyoda Hiroki4,Ishigaki Shoichi1ORCID,Taniike Masako56,Kato Takafumi456ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Fixed Prosthodontics Osaka University Graduate School of Dentistry Osaka Japan

2. Department of Orthodontics and Dentofacial Orthopedics Osaka University Graduate School of Dentistry Osaka Japan

3. Department of Prosthodontics, Gerodontology and Oral Rehabilitation Osaka University Graduate School of Dentistry Osaka Japan

4. Department of Oral Physiology Osaka University Graduate School of Dentistry Osaka Japan

5. United Graduate School of Child Development Osaka University Osaka Japan

6. Osaka University Hospital, Sleep Medicine Center Osaka Japan

Abstract

AbstractBackgroundSleep on the first night in a sleep laboratory is characterized by a lower sleep quality and frequency of rhythmic masticatory muscle activity (RMMA) than that on the second night in moderate to severe sleep bruxism (SB) patients.ObjectiveThe aims of this study was to clarify the physiological factors contributing to the first night effect on oromotor activity during sleep and investigate whether physiological factors involved in the first night effect differed between rhythmic and non‐rhythmic oromotor activities.MethodsPolysomnographic data collected on two consecutive nights from 15 moderate to severe SB subjects (F 7: M 8; age: 23.2 ± 1.3 [mean ± SD] years) were retrospectively analysed. Sleep variables, RMMA and non‐specific masticatory muscle activity (NSMA) were scored in relation to episode types (i.e. phasic or tonic and cluster or isolated), sleep architecture and transient arousals. The relationships between nightly differences in oromotor and sleep variables were assessed. The distribution of oromotor events, arousals, cortical electroencephalographic power, RR intervals and heart rate variability were examined in relation to sleep cycle changes. These variables were compared between the first and second nights and between RMMA and NSMA.ResultsSleep variables showed a lower sleep quality on Night 1 than on Night 2. In comparisons with Night 1, the RMMA index increased by 18.8% (p  < .001, the Wilcoxon signed‐rank test) on Night 2, while the NSMA index decreased by 17.9% (p  = .041). Changes in the RMMA index did not correlate with those in sleep variables, while changes in the NSMA index correlated with those in arousal‐related variables (p  < .001, Spearman's rank correlation). An increase in the RMMA index on Night 2 was found for the cluster type and stage N1 related to sleep cyclic fluctuations in cortical and cardiac activities. In contrast, the decrease in the NSMA index was associated with increases in the isolated type and the occurrence of stage N2 and wakefulness regardless of the sleep cycle.ConclusionDiscrepancies in first night effect on the occurrence of RMMA and NSMA represent unique sleep‐related processes in the genesis of oromotor phenotypes in SB subjects.

Funder

Japan Science and Technology Agency

Japan Society for the Promotion of Science

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

General Dentistry

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