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Wiley InterScience

Journal of Sleep Research

Journal of Sleep Research

Volume 9 Issue 2, Pages 175 - 183

Published Online: 24 Dec 2001

© 2009 European Sleep Research Society



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Zolpidem and sleep deprivation: Different effect on EEG power spectra
Hans-Peter Landolt , Luca A. Finelli, Corinne Roth, Alfred Buck, Peter Achermann & Alexander A. Borbély
  1 Institute of Pharmacology and Toxicology, University of Zürich, Zürich, Switzerland,   2 Center, Division of Nuclear Medicine, University Hospital, Zürich, Switzerland
Correspondence to: Borbély Dr
Copyright European Sleep Research Society
KEYWORDS
benzodiazepines • GABAA receptors • power spectral analysis • REM sleep • topography

ABSTRACT

To study the role of GABA-ergic mechanisms in sleep regulation, the combined action of 40 h sleep deprivation and either 20 mg zolpidem or placebo on the sleep electroencephalogram (EEG) were investigated by quantitative EEG analysis in eight young men who participated in a positron emission tomography study. Compared with baseline, sleep deprivation increased low-frequency (1.25–7.0 Hz) EEG power in non-rapid eye movement (NREM) sleep in the placebo night. After administration of zolpidem, power in the 3.75–10.0 Hz range and 14.25–16.0 Hz band was reduced. The largest decrease was observed in the theta band. Comparison with placebo revealed that zolpidem attenuated power in the entire 1.75–11.0 Hz range. The plasma concentration of zolpidem at 4.5 h after intake showed a positive correlation with the drug-induced difference in power from placebo in the 14.25–16.0 Hz band. Regional EEG analysis based on bipolar derivations along the antero-posterior axis disclosed, for NREM sleep, a drug-induced posterior shift of power in the frequency range of 7.75–9.75 Hz. Zolpidem did not affect rapid eye movemnt sleep spectra. We conclude that sleep deprivation and agonistic modulation of GABAA receptors have separate and additive effects on power spectra and that their effects are mediated by different neurophysiological mechanisms.


DIGITAL OBJECT IDENTIFIER (DOI)
10.1046/j.1365-2869.2000.00192.x About DOI

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