Abstract
AbstractDisturbed sleep is a key symptom in major depressive disorder (MDD). REM sleep alterations are well described in the current fliterature, but little is known about non-REM sleep alterations. Additionally, sleep disturbances relate to a variety of cognitive symptoms in MDD, but which features of non-REM sleep EEG contribute to this, remains unknown. We comprehensively analyzed non-REM sleep EEG features in three independently collected datasets (N=284). These included MDD patients with a broad age range, varying duration and severity of depression, unmedicated or medicated, age- and gender-matched to healthy controls. We explored changes in sleep architecture including sleep stages and cycles, spectral power, sleep spindles, slow waves (SW), and SW-spindle coupling. Next, we analyzed the association of these sleep features with acute measures of depression severity and overnight consolidation of procedural memory. Overall, no major systematic alterations in non-REM sleep architecture were found in patients compared to controls. For the microstructure of non-REM sleep, we observed a higher spindle amplitude in unmedicated patients compared to controls, and after the start of antidepressant medication longer SWs with lower amplitude and a more dispersed SW-spindle coupling. In addition, long-term, but not short-term medication seemed to lower spindle density. Overnight procedural memory consolidation was impaired in medicated patients and associated with lower sleep spindle density. Our results suggest that alterations in non-REM sleep EEG might be more subtle than previously reported. We discuss these findings in the context of antidepressant medication intake and age.Statement of SignificanceDepression affects large and diverse populations worldwide, including their sleep. Most sleep is non-REM sleep, which is vital to cognitive function, including memory. How non-REM is affected during a depression or medical treatment remains poorly investigated. We classified non-REM sleep of depressive patients against healthy controls in unprecedented analysis detail and confidence using the largest dataset published so far while also test sleep alterations associations with impaired memory. Surprisingly, severe depression alone did not alter sleep. We observed severe non-REM sleep alterations only worsening under patient medication, which ultimately coincided with 24-hour memory impairments. Though causal influences of medication on sleep in depressive patients remains to be investigated, this cautions common clinical practice in long-term treatment with antidepressants.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
Cited by
2 articles.
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