Central Sleep Apnea Alters Neuronal Excitability and Increases the Randomness in Sleep-Wake Transitions

Hila Dvir, Shu Guo, Shlomo Havlin, Ni Xin, Tai Jun, Daqing Li, Xu Zhifei, Rui Kang, Ronny P. Bartsch

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Objective: While most studies on Central Sleep Apnea (CSA) have focused on breathing and metabolic disorders, the neuronal dysfunction that causes CSA remains largely unknown. Here, we investigate the underlying neuronal mechanism of CSA by studying the sleep-wake dynamics as derived from hypnograms. Methods: We analyze sleep data of seven groups of subjects: healthy adults (n = 48), adults with obstructive sleep apnea (OSA) (n = 29), adults with CSA (n = 25), healthy children (n = 40), children with OSA (n = 18), children with CSA (n = 73) and CSA children treated with CPAP (n = 10). We calculate sleep-wake parameters based on the probability distributions of wake-bout durations and sleep-bout durations. We compare these parameters with results obtained from a neuronal model that simulates the interplay between sleep- and wake-promoting neurons. Results: We find that sleep arousals of CSA patients show a characteristic time scale (i.e., exponential distribution) in contrast to the scale-invariant (i.e., power-law) distribution that has been reported for arousals in healthy sleep. Furthermore, we show that this change in arousal statistics is caused by triggering more arousals of similar durations, which through our model can be related to a higher excitability threshold in sleep-promoting neurons in CSA patients. Conclusions: We propose a neuronal mechanism to shed light on CSA pathophysiology and a method to discriminate between CSA and OSA. We show that higher neuronal excitability thresholds can lead to complex reorganization of sleep-wake dynamics. Significance: The derived sleep parameters enable a more specific evaluation of CSA severity and can be used for CSA diagnosis and monitor CSA treatment.

Original languageEnglish
Article number9027993
Pages (from-to)3185-3194
Number of pages10
JournalIEEE Transactions on Biomedical Engineering
Volume67
Issue number11
DOIs
StatePublished - Nov 2020

Keywords

  • Central sleep apnea
  • excitability threshold
  • exponential distribution
  • power-law distribution
  • sleep arousals
  • sleep modeling
  • sleep-wake dynamics
  • wake-bout durations

All Science Journal Classification (ASJC) codes

  • Biomedical Engineering

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