Detail
Article
Online article
FT
Medvik - BMC
  • Something wrong with this record ?

Morphological characteristics of cerebellum, pons and thalamus in Reccurent isolated sleep paralysis - A pilot study

E. Miletínová, M. Kliková, A. Dostalíková, J. Bušková

. 2024 ; 18 (-) : 1396829. [pub] 20240619

Status not-indexed Language English Country Switzerland

Document type Journal Article

INTRODUCTION: Recurrent isolated sleep paralysis (RISP) is a rapid eye movement sleep (REM) parasomnia, characterized by the loss of voluntary movements upon sleep onset and/or awakening with preserved consciousness. Evidence suggests microstructural changes of sleep in RISP, although the mechanism of this difference has not been clarified yet. Our research aims to identify potential morphological changes in the brain that can reflect these regulations. MATERIALS AND METHODS: We recruited 10 participants with RISP (8 women; mean age 24.7 years; SD 2.4) and 10 healthy control subjects (w/o RISP; 3 women; mean age 26.3 years; SD 3.7). They underwent video-polysomnography (vPSG) and sleep macrostructure was analyzed. After that participants underwent magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) of the brain. We focused on 2-dimensional measurements of cerebellum, pons and thalamus. Statistical analysis was done in SPSS program. After analysis for normality we performed Mann-Whitney U test to compare our data. RESULTS: We did not find any statistically significant difference in sleep macrostructure between patients with and w/o RISP. No evidence of other sleep disturbances was found. 2-dimensional MRI measurements revealed statistically significant increase in cerebellar vermis height (p = 0.044) and antero-posterior diameter of midbrain-pons junction (p = 0.018) in RISP compared to w/o RISP. DISCUSSION: Our results suggest increase in size of cerebellum and midbrain-pons junction in RISP. This enlargement could be a sign of an over-compensatory mechanism to otherwise dysfunctional regulatory pathways. Further research should be done to measure these differences in time and with closer respect to the frequency of RISP episodes.

References provided by Crossref.org

000      
00000naa a2200000 a 4500
001      
bmc24018347
003      
CZ-PrNML
005      
20241016081914.0
007      
ta
008      
241008e20240619sz f 000 0|eng||
009      
AR
024    7_
$a 10.3389/fnana.2024.1396829 $2 doi
035    __
$a (PubMed)38962392
040    __
$a ABA008 $b cze $d ABA008 $e AACR2
041    0_
$a eng
044    __
$a sz
100    1_
$a Miletínová, Eva $u National Institute of Mental Health, Klecany, Czechia $u Third Faculty of Medicine, Charles University, Praha, Czechia
245    10
$a Morphological characteristics of cerebellum, pons and thalamus in Reccurent isolated sleep paralysis - A pilot study / $c E. Miletínová, M. Kliková, A. Dostalíková, J. Bušková
520    9_
$a INTRODUCTION: Recurrent isolated sleep paralysis (RISP) is a rapid eye movement sleep (REM) parasomnia, characterized by the loss of voluntary movements upon sleep onset and/or awakening with preserved consciousness. Evidence suggests microstructural changes of sleep in RISP, although the mechanism of this difference has not been clarified yet. Our research aims to identify potential morphological changes in the brain that can reflect these regulations. MATERIALS AND METHODS: We recruited 10 participants with RISP (8 women; mean age 24.7 years; SD 2.4) and 10 healthy control subjects (w/o RISP; 3 women; mean age 26.3 years; SD 3.7). They underwent video-polysomnography (vPSG) and sleep macrostructure was analyzed. After that participants underwent magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) of the brain. We focused on 2-dimensional measurements of cerebellum, pons and thalamus. Statistical analysis was done in SPSS program. After analysis for normality we performed Mann-Whitney U test to compare our data. RESULTS: We did not find any statistically significant difference in sleep macrostructure between patients with and w/o RISP. No evidence of other sleep disturbances was found. 2-dimensional MRI measurements revealed statistically significant increase in cerebellar vermis height (p = 0.044) and antero-posterior diameter of midbrain-pons junction (p = 0.018) in RISP compared to w/o RISP. DISCUSSION: Our results suggest increase in size of cerebellum and midbrain-pons junction in RISP. This enlargement could be a sign of an over-compensatory mechanism to otherwise dysfunctional regulatory pathways. Further research should be done to measure these differences in time and with closer respect to the frequency of RISP episodes.
590    __
$a NEINDEXOVÁNO
655    _2
$a časopisecké články $7 D016428
700    1_
$a Kliková, Monika $u National Institute of Mental Health, Klecany, Czechia
700    1_
$a Dostalíková, Amálie $u Third Faculty of Medicine, Charles University, Praha, Czechia
700    1_
$a Bušková, Jitka $u National Institute of Mental Health, Klecany, Czechia $u Third Faculty of Medicine, Charles University, Praha, Czechia
773    0_
$w MED00174548 $t Frontiers in neuroanatomy $x 1662-5129 $g Roč. 18 (20240619), s. 1396829
856    41
$u https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/38962392 $y Pubmed
910    __
$a ABA008 $b sig $c sign $y - $z 0
990    __
$a 20241008 $b ABA008
991    __
$a 20241016081909 $b ABA008
999    __
$a ok $b bmc $g 2196532 $s 1230300
BAS    __
$a 3
BAS    __
$a PreBMC-PubMed-not-MEDLINE
BMC    __
$a 2024 $b 18 $c - $d 1396829 $e 20240619 $i 1662-5129 $m Frontiers in neuroanatomy $n Front Neuroanat $x MED00174548
LZP    __
$a Pubmed-20241008

Find record

Citation metrics

Loading data ...

Archiving options

Loading data ...