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Het gebied van hersenen dat kan worden bevorderd om de cognitieve tekorten van geïdentificeerdek slaapontbering te verminderen

Onderzoek door het Universitaire Medische Centrum dat van Colombia wordt geleid

NEW YORK - een onderzoeksteam van het Medische Centrum van Colombia Universitair heeft aan het licht gebracht hoe de stimulatie van een bepaald hersenengebied kan helpen de tekorten in het werk geheugen verhelpen, verbonden aan een uitgebreide slaapontbering.

Het werk het geheugen is een specifieke vorm van geheugen op korte termijn dat op de capaciteit betrekking heeft om task-specific informatie voor een beperkte kalender op te slaan, b.v., waar uw auto in een reusachtige wandelgalerijpartij of het herinneren van een telefoonaantal voor weinig seconden alvorens het neer te schrijven wordt geparkeerd. Men heeft lang vastgesteld dat de cognitieve prestaties, zoals het werk geheugen, met slaapontbering dalen.

„Wij zijn opgewekt over de mogelijkheden om hersenenstimulatie te gebruiken om cognitieve functie,“ bovengenoemde Bruce Luber, Ph.D., hoofdauteur van het document en een instructeur in klinische psychiatrie bij de Universitaire Universiteit van Colombia van Artsen & Chirurgen en het Psychiatrische Instituut van de Staat van New York te verbeteren. „Wij publiceerden onlangs een studie waarin wij de het werk geheugenprestaties van jonge volwassenen konden voor het eerst verbeteren en deze nieuwe studie breidt onze bevindingen uit.“

„In dit onderzoek dat, konden wij een hersenennetwerk non-invasively manipuleren door weergave gedeeltelijk remediate de gevolgen van slaapontbering gebruikend wordt geïdentificeerd herhaalde transcranial magnetische stimulatie (rTMS), die reeds belofte in het behandelen van depressie en andere wanorde,“ bovengenoemde Sarah H. Lisanby, M.D. heeft getoond, hogere auteur van de studie en mede-hoofdonderzoeker die van de toelage DARPA dit onderzoek financieren. Dr. Lisanby is verwante professor van klinische psychiatrie en leider van de Stimulatie van Hersenen en de Therapeutische Afdeling van de Modulatie, bij de Universitaire Universiteit van Colombia van Artsen & Chirurgen en het Psychiatrische Instituut van de Staat van New York.

„Deze bevindingen hebben belangrijke implicaties voor beter het begrip van de neurale basissen van cognitieve daling in de bejaarden. Dr. Stern was principal investigator of the DARPA grant.

Findings were published online on Jan. 17, 2008 in Cerebral Cortex; the paper will be published in an upcoming print issue of the journal.

Study Designed to Test Sleep Deprivation Network, by Influencing the Expression of Key Brain Areas in the Network

In a previous study , the investigators identified a sleep deprivation network of brain areas that was active during the performance of a working memory task. Expression of this network was reduced following sleep deprivation. They also found a relationship between reduced expression of this network following sleep deprivation and poorer performance on the working memory task.

In the study, 15 young, healthy subjects underwent sleep deprivation for 48 hours. Working memory was tested using a letter recognition test, known as the delayed match to sample (DMS) task, in which subjects have to recall as quickly as possible whether a letter was included in a set of letters they had just seen. Participants performed this task during fMRI sessions both before sleep deprivation and at the conclusion of the sleep deprivation period.

The researchers used repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation (rTMS) to test whether stimulation of three brain regions in the previously identified network following the sleep deprivation period, could improve performance on the working memory task. rTMS administers a rapid sequence of magnetic pulses to a specific brain area.

Results showed that stimulation at a site over left lateral occipital cortex, a prominent part of the brain network identified with fMRI, resulted in a reduction of sleep-induced slower reaction time without a corresponding decrease in accuracy. This improvement in performance was most marked in those individuals who showed the greatest reduction in the expression of the brain network following sleep deprivation.

"In addition to expanding our understanding of cognitive decline in the elderly, these findings may also have implications for new ways to treat sleep deprivation, a pervasive problem for soldiers, truck drivers and night-shift workers, which can result in impairment on the job and accidents," said Dr. Stern.

"Cognitive Reserve" Varies Among Individuals

Elderly persons show a broad range of individual differences in the degree to which they experience cognitive deficits as they age. One hypothesis to explain these differences was first formulated by Dr. Stern in 2002 and has since been adopted by neuroscientists worldwide, and is known as cognitive reserve. The theory of cognitive reserve suggests that some individuals are better able to cope with age - related or other neuropathology because they can call upon more neural resources.

These present findings are consisted with the concept of cognitive reserve because some participants suffered larger deficits in working memory performance due to sleep deprivation, while others were much less affected. These susceptibility differences were related to differential expression of a brain network.

This suggests that the activity of the sleep deprivation network exhibited properties of neural reserve, where a greater capacity or efficiency in the network allowed some individuals to maintain performance in the face of sleep deprivation. Moreover, these results suggest that rTMS was able to somehow enhance the network activity in those who were not able to maintain performance, artificially facilitating neural reserve.

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This research was supported by a grant from the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA), the central research and development organization for the U.S. Department of Defense.

Columbia University Medical Center provides international leadership in basic, pre-clinical and clinical research, in medical and health sciences education, and in - patient care. Leaders van center trains future van The dedicated medical and includes the work of de many van dentists. and public health van physicians. scientists. nurses. van professionals at the College of Physicians & Surgeons. Brievenbesteller School of Public Health. the College of Dental Medicine. the School of Nursing. the the biomedical departments of the Graduate School of Arts and Sciences. and research centers and institutions. allied Established in 1767, Columbia's College of Physicians & Surgeons was the first institution in the country to grant the M.D. degree. Among the most selective medical schools in the country, the school is home to the largest medical research enterprise in New York State and one of the largest in the country. Information. please visit www.cumc.columbia.edu van For more.

 
 
 
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