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Sleepy brain prone to sudden shutdowns study

2008-05-21 08:31:34

By Julie SteenhuysenTue May 20, 6:53 PM ET

Being deprived of sleep even for one night makes the brain unstable and prone

to sudden shutdowns akin to a power failure -- brief lapses that hover between

sleep and wakefulness, researchers said on Tuesday.

"It's as though it is both asleep and awake and they are switching between each

other very rapidly," said David Dinges of the University of Pennsylvania School

of Medicine, whose study appears in the Journal of Neuroscience.

"Imagine you are sitting in a room watching a movie with the lights on. In a

stable brain, the lights stay on all the time. In a sleepy brain, the lights

suddenly go off," Dinges said in a telephone interview.

The findings suggest that people who are sleep-deprived alternate between

periods of near-normal brain function and dramatic lapses in attention and

visual processing.

"This involves more structures changing than we've ever seen before, but

changing just during these lapses," Dinges said.

He and colleagues did brain imaging studies on 24 adults who performed simple

tasks involving visual attention when they were well rested and when they had

missed a night's sleep.

The researchers used a type of brain imaging known as functional magnetic

resonance imaging, or fMRI, which measures blood flow in the brain.

They found significant, momentary lapses in several areas of the brain, which

seemed to frequently falter when the people were deprived of sleep, but not

when these same people were well rested.

"These people are not lying in bed. They are sitting up doing a task they

learned and they are working very hard at doing their best," Dinges said.

He said the lapses seem to suggest that loss of sleep renders the brain

incapable of fully fending off the involuntary drive to sleep.

He said the study makes it clear how dangerous sleep deprivation can be while

driving on the highway, when even a four-second lapse could lead to a major

accident.

"These are not just academic interests," he said.

(Editing by Will Dunham and Cynthia Osterman)