Structural organization of dream experience during daytime sleep-onset rapid eye movement period sleep of patients with narcolepsy type 1

Author:

Cipolli Carlo1,Pizza Fabio23,Bellucci Claudia1,Mazzetti Michela1ORCID,Tuozzi Giovanni4,Vandi Stefano23,Plazzi Giuseppe23

Affiliation:

1. Department of Experimental, Diagnostic and Specialty Medicine, University of Bologna, Bologna, Italy

2. Department of Biomedical and Neuromotor Sciences, University of Bologna, Bologna, Italy

3. IRCSS Istituto delle Scienze Neurologiche di Bologna, Bologna, Italy

4. Department of Psychology, University of Bologna, Bologna, Italy

Abstract

Abstract Study Objective To assess the frequency of dream experience (DE) developed during naps at Multiple Sleep Latency Test (MSLT) by patients with narcolepsy type 1 (NT1) and establish, using story-grammar analysis, the structural organization of DEs developed during naps with sleep onset rapid eye movement (REM) period (SOREMP) sleep compared with their DEs during early- and late-night REM sleep. Methods Thirty drug-free cognitively intact adult NT1 patients were asked to report DE developed during each MSLT nap. Ten NT1 patients also spent voluntarily a supplementary night being awakened during the first-cycle and third-cycle REM sleep. Patients provided dream reports, white dreams, and no dreams, whose frequencies were matched in naps with SOREMP versus non-REM (NREM) sleep. All dream reports were then analyzed using story-grammar rules. Results DE was recalled in detail (dream report) by NT1 patients after 75% of naps with SOREMP sleep and after 25% of naps with NREM sleep. Dream reports were provided by 8 out of 10 NT1 patients after both awakenings from nighttime REM sleep. Story-grammar analysis of dream reports showed that SOREMP-DEs are organized as hierarchically ordered sequences of events (so-called dream-stories), which are longer and more complex in the first and fourth SOREMP naps and are comparable with nighttime REM-DEs. Conclusions The similar structural organization of SOREMP-DEs with nighttime REM-DEs indicates that their underlying cognitive processes are highly, albeit not uniformly, effective during daytime SOREMP sleep. Given the peculiar neurophysiology of SOREMP sleep, investigating SOREMP-DEs may cast further light on the relationships between the neurophysiological and psychological processes involved in REM-dreaming.

Funder

University of Bologna

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Physiology (medical),Neurology (clinical)

Reference62 articles.

1. Dreams in patients with sleep disorders;Schredl;Sleep Med Rev.,2009

2. Studies in psychophysiology of dreams. III. The dream of narcolepsy;Vogel;Arch Gen Psychiatry.,1960

3. Nocturnal sleep of narcoleptics;Rechtschaffen;Electroencephalogr Clin Neurophysiol.,1963

4. Excessive daytime sleepiness in man: multiple sleep latency measurement in narcoleptic and control subjects;Richardson;Electroencephalogr Clin Neurophysiol.,1978

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