Physiological movements during sleep in healthy adults across all ages: a video-polysomnographic analysis of non-codified movements reveals sex differences and distinct motor patterns

Author:

Montini Angelica1,Loddo Giuseppe2,Zenesini Corrado3,Mainieri Greta13,Baldelli Luca13,Mignani Francesco3,Mondini Susanna3,Provini Federica13ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Biomedical and NeuroMotor Sciences (DIBINEM), University of Bologna , Bologna , Italy

2. Department of Primary Care, Azienda AUSL Bologna , Bologna , Italy

3. IRCCS, Istituto delle Scienze Neurologiche di Bologna, UOC Clinica Neurologica Rete Metropolitana NEUROMET, Bellaria Hospital , Bologna , Italy

Abstract

Abstract Study Objectives To define sleep-related movements in healthy adults according to sex and age. Methods Sleep-related movements from 50 video-polysomnography (vPSG) recordings of 27 men and 23 women, from 20 to 70 years old, were classified according to International classification of sleep disorders (ICSD-3-TR) and American Academy of Sleep Medicine (AASM) criteria (codified movements); the remaining movements (non-codified movements) were described according to type (elementary movements-EMs or complex movements-CMs), topography (focal, segmental, multifocal or generalized) and, if present, were assigned to motor patterns (MPs). Results Of 4057 movements analyzed, 54.6% (2216/4057) were non-codified (1861 CMs, 355 EMs) and 1841 were codified. CMs were mainly generalized (70%) while EMs were multifocal (40%) or focal (30%). The median movement index (MI; movement/hour) was 11 and the median duration was 4 seconds. MI decreased from stages N1/REM > N2 > N3; men showed a higher MI. An MP was assigned to 2204 codified and non-codified movements, mainly stretching (50%) and scratching (30%). Stretching increased in REM sleep while food-carrying behaviors increased in N2. Men showed more food-carrying behaviors, changes of body positions, and comfort movements while stretching was more common in women. Younger participants exhibited more food-carrying behaviors, while scratching and stretching were more prevalent in the middle-aged group. Older participants showed more changes in body positions and comfort movements. Conclusions In total, 54.6% of sleep-related movements in healthy participants were non-codified and characterized by motor sequences that can configure MPs. Our comprehensive classification method allows a detailed description of the physiological movements underlying differential motor control during sleep stages influenced by age and sex.

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Reference39 articles.

1. Studies of body movements during night sleep in infancy;Fukumoto;Brain Dev.,1981

2. Su di un fenomeno motorio costante del sonno normale: le mioclonie ipniche fisiologiche;De Lisi;Riv Pat Nerv Ment,1932

3. Muscle tonus in human subjects during sleep and dreaming;Jacobson;Exp Neurol.,1964

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