Mechanisms underlying the prolonged activation of the genioglossus following arousal from sleep

Author:

Dawson Andrew1,Avraam Joanne12,Nicholas Christian L12ORCID,Kay Amanda1,Thornton Therese1,Feast Nicole1,Fridgant Monika D1,O’Donoghue Fergal J23,Trinder John1,Jordan Amy S12ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Melbourne School of Psychological Sciences, The University of Melbourne , Parkville, Victoria , Australia

2. Department of Respiratory and Sleep Medicine and Institute for Breathing and Sleep , Austin Health, Heidelberg, Victoria , Australia

3. Faculty of Medicine, The University of Melbourne , Parkville, Victoria , Australia

Abstract

Abstract Study Objectives Transient arousal from sleep has been shown to elicit a prolonged increase in genioglossus muscle activity that persists following the return to sleep and which may protect against subsequent airway collapse. We hypothesized that this increased genioglossal activity following return to sleep after an arousal is due to persistent firing of inspiratory-modulated motor units (MUs) that are recruited during the arousal. Methods Thirty-four healthy participants were studied overnight while wearing a nasal mask with pneumotachograph to measure ventilation and with 4 intramuscular genioglossus EMG electrodes. During stable N2 and N3 sleep, auditory tones were played to induce brief (3-15s) AASM arousals. Ventilation and genioglossus MUs were quantified before the tone, during the arousal and for 10 breaths after the return to sleep. Results A total of 1089 auditory tones were played and gave rise to 239 MUs recorded across arousal and the return to sleep in 20 participants (aged 23 ± 4.2 years and BMI 22.5 ± 2.2 kg/m2). Ventilation was elevated above baseline during arousal and the first post-arousal breath (p < .001). Genioglossal activity was elevated for five breaths following the return to sleep, due to increased firing rate and recruitment of inspiratory modulated MUs, as well as a small increase in tonic MU firing frequency. Conclusions The sustained increase in genioglossal activity that occurs on return to sleep after arousal is primarily a result of persistent activity of inspiratory-modulated MUs, with a slight contribution from tonic units. Harnessing genioglossal activation following arousal may potentially be useful for preventing obstructive respiratory events.

Funder

Australian Research Council

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Physiology (medical),Neurology (clinical)

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