Article Search

 Wave of hope for insomniacs
    Steve Connor
    May 06 2007 at 02:58PM
Get IOL on your
mobile at m.iol.co.za

Scientists may have discovered a way of triggering deep sleep in people suffering from chronic insomnia.

A study has found a way of stimulating the brain so that sleep-deprived people can feel the full restorative powers of an eight-hour period of slumber.

The researchers have developed an electronic device that stimulates the brain with harmless magnetic pulses which cross into the nerves that control a type of deep sleep called "slow-wave activity".

Giulio Tononi, professor of psychiatry at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, said about 80 percent of sleeping hours were composed of slow-wave activity. In response to each burst of magnetism used in the study, the brain produced the typical slow waves of deep sleep, he said.
Continues Below ↓





"With a single pulse, we were able to induce a wave that looks identical to the waves the brain makes normally during sleep," Prof Tononi said.

There are two broad categories of sleep. One is when the brain starts to dream and the eyes move rapidly from side to side under the closed eyelids. The other type of sleep is when slow waves wash over the brain at a rate of about one a second 1 000 times a night.

The scientists have shown that by stimulating a particular part of the brain of sleeping volunteers with harmless magnetic pulses they were able to induce slow waves to move across the entire brain - just like they do in deep sleep.

"We don't know why, but this is a very good place to stimulate big waves that clearly travel through every part of the brain," Tononi said.

One of the aims of the research is to understand the nature of sleep and to find a way of helping people suffering from chronic insomnia which may result from an inability to carry out slow-wave activity.

"We have reasons to think that slow waves are not just something that happens, but that they may be important in sleep's restorative powers," Tononi said.

The importance of slow waves can be seen from the fact that when sleep-deprived people are allowed to sleep they produce larger and more numerous slow waves, which become weaker as sleep progresses.

It may be possible to produce an electronic device that stimulates a deep-sleep power nap that mimics a full eight-hour period of rest in a fraction of the time, the scientists said. Another possibility is that the magnetic stimulator might be used to aid the retention of memories that are normally formed during the day and consolidated at night, Tononi said.

One theory is that during the day the brain is having to cope with masses of new information which is constantly stimulating the connections between the brain's nerve cells. The function of slow-wave sleep may be to weaken these connections so that they do not overload the brain, he said.

"During the slow waves, all the connections, step by step, are becoming a little weaker. By morning, the total connection strength is back to the way it was the morning before," Tononi said.

"The trick is to downscale all the connections by the same percentage so the ones that were stronger are still stronger. That way you don't lose the memory," he said.

The latest research is published in the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. - Tribune Foreign Service

    • This article was originally published on page 8 of Tribune on May 06, 2007
Email StoryPrint Story
BOOKMARK THIS STORY
Social bookmarking allows users to save and categorise a personal collection of bookmarks and share them with others. This is different to using your own browser bookmarks which are available using the menus within your web browser.

Use the links below to share this article on the social bookmarking site of your choice.

Read more about social bookmarking at Wikipedia - Social Bookmarking

muti



     Related Articles
More Science stories

Watch IOLs latest videos on YouTube Join IOLs Facebook page Follow IOL on Twitter





     Online Services

     More Services

     More Science Stories