Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
3042654 Clinical Neurophysiology 2016 6 Pages PDF
Abstract

•Patients with epilepsy were tested serially on a visuospatial task.•Retention rates were higher after 12 h with sleep vs. 12 h of wakefulness.•Overnight retention best correlated with duration of slow wave sleep.

ObjectiveWe sought to examine whether patients with focal epilepsy exhibit sleep dependent memory consolidation, whether memory retention rates correlated with particular aspects of sleep physiology, and how the process was affected by seizures.MethodsWe prospectively recruited patients with focal epilepsy and assessed declarative memory using a task consisting of 15 pairs of colored pictures on a 5 × 6 grid. Patients were tested 12 h after training, once after 12 h of wakefulness and once after 12 h that included sleep. EMG chin electrodes were placed to enable sleep scoring. The number and density of sleep spindles were assessed using a wavelet-based algorithm.ResultsEleven patients were analyzed age 21–56 years. The percentage memory retention over 12 h of wakefulness was 62.7% and over 12 h which included sleep 83.6% (p = 0.04). Performance on overnight testing correlated with the duration of slow wave sleep (SWS) (r = +0.63, p < 0.05). Three patients had seizures during the day, and 3 had nocturnal seizures. Day-time seizures did not affect retention rates, while those patients who had night time seizures had a drop in retention from an average of 92% to 60.5%.ConclusionsThere is evidence of sleep dependent memory consolidation in patients with epilepsy which mostly correlates with the amount of SWS. Our preliminary findings suggest that nocturnal seizures likely disrupt sleep dependent memory consolidation.SignificanceFindings highlight the importance of SWS in sleep dependent memory consolidation and the adverse impact of nocturnal seizures on this process.

Related Topics
Life Sciences Neuroscience Neurology
Authors
, , , , , , ,