Consolidation of Motor Skills & Sleep Homeostasis in Parkinson's Disease
巩固运动技能
基本信息
- 批准号:7208283
- 负责人:
- 金额:$ 37.51万
- 依托单位:
- 依托单位国家:美国
- 项目类别:
- 财政年份:2007
- 资助国家:美国
- 起止时间:2007-02-15 至 2012-01-31
- 项目状态:已结题
- 来源:
- 关键词:AddressAnimalsAppendixAreaAttentionBehavioralBicyclingBrain regionCaregiversCerebrumCharacteristicsCollaborationsComputersDailyDataDefectDevelopmentDiseaseDisease ProgressionDisruptionElectroencephalographyElectrophysiology (science)FrequenciesGoalsHeartHomeostasisHumanImageImpairmentInterventionInvasiveInvestigationLaboratoriesLearningLevodopaLifeLinkLocalizedLocationLong-Term PotentiationMemoryMemory impairmentMotorMotor CortexMotor SkillsMovementNeuronal PlasticityNumbersParietalParietal LobeParkinson DiseasePatientsPerformancePharmaceutical PreparationsPharmacological TreatmentProcessPsychophysiologyQuality of lifeREM SleepRateResearch PersonnelRoleRotationShoesSleepSleep DisordersSlow-Wave SleepStagingSymptomsSynaptic plasticityTestingTherapeuticTherapeutic InterventionThinkingTimeTrainingTranscranial magnetic stimulationUniversitiesWakefulnessWisconsinWorkWritingbaseexperienceimplicit memoryimprovedindexingkinematicsmotor impairmentmotor learningneuromechanismnon rapid eye movementnovelprogramsresponseskillssleep regulationvisual motor
项目摘要
DESCRIPTION (provided by applicant): Behavioral routines and motor skills are used in everyday activities for efficient and fast performance. In patients with Parkinson's disease (PD), the execution of automatic routines is impaired in the early stages of the disease. This impairment, which becomes progressively more severe, exacerbates the motor symptoms of PD and interferes with the execution of daily activities. Recent studies suggest that PD patients may be impaired selectively in their ability to consolidate motor skill memories. New work from our and other laboratories has shown that motor skill consolidation is exquisitely dependent on sleep. Specifically, in a recent study with high-definition electroencephalography (hd-EEG) in healthy subjects, we found that learning a visuomotor skill produced a local increase in sleep slow-wave activity (SWA) over a cortical area (right parietal) involved in the task. Most importantly, the increase in SWA, a well-known marker of sleep homeostasis that reflects the accumulation of sleep need, was highly correlated with sleep-dependent memory consolidation indices. The link between the consolidation of motor routines and sleep homeostasis is potentially relevant in view of the well-known sleep problems in PD patients. This proposal will test the hypothesis that the impairment in motor skill consolidation in PD patients is related to a disruption of sleep homeostasis in select brain regions. Specifically, we will determine whether PD patients: 1) have a defect in sleep-dependent consolidation of a motor learning task; 2) have a defect in local SWA homeostasis in the brain regions involved in the motor task or in other brain regions; 3) whether Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation (TMS) enhances SWA and restores sleep-dependent memory consolidation. We will test these hypotheses through detailed kinematic investigations and, for the first time, with whole-night hd-EEG recordings. To avoid confounding factors, we will focus on patients with initial PD who are drug-na'i've and otherwise healthy. The results will provide the first evidence concerning regional deficits in SWA homeostasis in PD patients; they will also indicate whether such deficits may be related mechanistically to impaired memory consolidation and may be restored by TMS. Consistent with the goals of NINDS, these studies will provide the basis for a rational therapeutic approach to enhancing sleep homeostasis in PD patients to improve their motor skills and quality of life.
描述(申请人提供):在日常活动中使用行为常规和运动技能,以实现高效和快速的表现。在帕金森氏病(PD)患者中,在疾病的早期阶段,自动程序的执行受到损害。这种损害逐渐变得更加严重,加剧了帕金森病的运动症状,干扰了日常活动的执行。最近的研究表明,帕金森病患者巩固运动技能记忆的能力可能受到选择性的损害。我们和其他实验室的新研究表明,运动技能的巩固微妙地依赖于睡眠。具体地说,在最近对健康受试者进行的高清晰度脑电(HD-EEG)研究中,我们发现,学习视觉运动技能会在参与任务的皮质区域(右顶叶)产生局部睡眠慢波活动(SWA)。最重要的是,SWA的增加与睡眠依赖记忆巩固指数高度相关。SWA是一种众所周知的睡眠稳态标志,反映了睡眠需求的积累。鉴于帕金森病患者众所周知的睡眠问题,运动规律的巩固和睡眠稳态之间的联系可能是相关的。这项建议将检验这一假设,即帕金森病患者运动技能巩固方面的障碍与选定脑区睡眠稳态的破坏有关。具体地说,我们将确定PD患者是否:1)在睡眠依赖的巩固运动学习任务方面存在缺陷;2)在参与运动任务的大脑区域或其他大脑区域存在局部SWA稳态缺陷;3)经颅磁刺激(TMS)是否增强SWA并恢复睡眠依赖的记忆巩固。我们将通过详细的运动学研究,并首次使用通宵HD-EEG记录来验证这些假设。为了避免混杂因素,我们将重点关注最初患有帕金森病的患者,他们没有药物,其他方面都很健康。这一结果将为帕金森病患者SWA内稳态的区域性缺陷提供第一个证据;它们还将表明这种缺陷是否可能与记忆巩固受损有关,并可能被TMS恢复。与NINDS的目标一致,这些研究将为合理的治疗方法提供基础,以增强PD患者的睡眠稳态,以改善他们的运动技能和生活质量。
项目成果
期刊论文数量(0)
专著数量(0)
科研奖励数量(0)
会议论文数量(0)
专利数量(0)
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M. Felice Marina GHILARDI其他文献
M. Felice Marina GHILARDI的其他文献
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{{ truncateString('M. Felice Marina GHILARDI', 18)}}的其他基金
Consolidation of Motor Skills & Sleep Homeostasis in Parkinson's Disease
巩固运动技能
- 批准号:
7565951 - 财政年份:2007
- 资助金额:
$ 37.51万 - 项目类别:
Consolidation of Motor Skills & Sleep Homeostasis in Parkinson's Disease
巩固运动技能
- 批准号:
7753187 - 财政年份:2007
- 资助金额:
$ 37.51万 - 项目类别:
Consolidation of Motor Skills & Sleep Homeostasis in Parkinson's Disease
巩固运动技能
- 批准号:
7354842 - 财政年份:2007
- 资助金额:
$ 37.51万 - 项目类别:
Consolidation of Motor Skills & Sleep Homeostasis in Parkinson's Disease
巩固运动技能
- 批准号:
8015228 - 财政年份:2007
- 资助金额:
$ 37.51万 - 项目类别:
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