Brain connectivity is altered by extreme physical exercise during non-REM sleep and wakefulness: indications from EEG and fMRI studies

被引:2
|
作者
Menicucci, D. [1 ]
Gentili, C. [2 ]
Piarulli, A. [3 ,4 ]
Laurino, M. [5 ]
Pellegrini, S. [6 ]
Mastorci, F. [7 ]
Bedini, R. [7 ]
Montanaro, D. [8 ]
Sebastiani, L. [1 ]
Gemignani, A. [5 ,7 ,9 ,10 ]
机构
[1] Univ Pisa, Dept Translat Res New Technol Med & Surg, Pisa, Italy
[2] Univ Padua, Dept Gen Psychol, Padua, Italy
[3] Scuola Super Sant Anna, Perceptual Robot Lab, Pisa, Italy
[4] Univ & Univ Hosp Liege, GIGA Res B34, Coma Sci Grp, Liege, Belgium
[5] Scuola Super Sant Anna, EXTREME Ctr, Inst Life Sci, Pisa, Italy
[6] Univ Pisa, Dept Clin & Expt Med, Pisa, Italy
[7] Natl Res Council CNR, Inst Clin Physiol, Pisa, Italy
[8] Fdn CNR, Neuroradiol Unit, Reg Toscana G Monasterio, Pisa, Italy
[9] Univ Pisa, Dept Surg Med Mol & Crit Area Pathol, Via Savi 10, I-56126 Pisa, Italy
[10] AOUP Santa Chiara, Clin Psychol Branch, Pisa, Italy
来源
ARCHIVES ITALIENNES DE BIOLOGIE | 2016年 / 154卷 / 04期
关键词
Physical exercise; Sleep slow oscillations; Global connectivity; Cytokines; Synchronization; Cerebral excitability; Humans; STATE FUNCTIONAL CONNECTIVITY; SLOW OSCILLATION; STRENUOUS EXERCISE; SPECTRAL DENSITY; STRESS; HUMANS; IMMUNE; POWER; INTERLEUKIN-6; DEPRESSION;
D O I
10.12871/00039829201641
中图分类号
Q189 [神经科学];
学科分类号
071006 ;
摘要
Brain connectivity is associated to behavioral states (e.g. wake, sleep) and modified by physical activity although, to date, it is not clear which components (e.g. hypothalamus-pituitary-adrenal axis hormones, cytokines) associated to the exercise are involved. In this pilot study, we used extreme exercise (UltraTriathlon) as a model to investigate physical-activity-related changes of brain connectivity. We studied post-race brain synchronization during wakefulness and sleep as well as possible correlations between exercise-related cytokines/hormones and synchronization features. For wakefulness, global synchronization was evaluated by estimating from fMRI data (12 athletes) the brain global connectivity (GC). GC increased in several brain regions, mainly related to sensory-motor activity, emotional modulation and response to stress that may foster rapid exchange of information across regions, and reflect post-race internally-focused mental activity or disengagement from previous motor programs. No significant correlations between cytokines/hormones and GC were found. For sleep (8 athletes), synchronization was evaluated by estimating the local-(cortical) and global-related (thalamocortical) EEG features associated to the phenomenon of Sleep Slow Oscillations (SSO) of NREM sleep. Results showed that: power of fast rhythms in the baseline preceding the SSO increased in midline and parietal regions; amplitude and duration of SSOs increased, mainly in posterior areas; sigma modulation in the SSO up state decreased. In the post race, IL-10 positively correlated with fast rhythms baseline, SSO rate and positive slope; IL-1ra and cortisol inversely correlated with SSO duration; TNF-alpha and C-reactive protein positively correlated with fast rhythm modulation in the SSO up state. Sleep results suggest that: arousal during sleep, estimated by baseline fast rhythms, is increased; SSO may be sustained by cortical excitability, linked to anti-inflammatory markers (IL-10); thalamo-cortical entrainment, (sigma modulation), is impaired in athletes with higher inflammatory markers.
引用
收藏
页码:103 / 117
页数:15
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