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Predicting Cognitive Resilience Against Sleep Loss

Not Applicable
Completed
Conditions
Sleep Deprivation
Interventions
Behavioral: Sleep deprivation
Registration Number
NCT01651429
Lead Sponsor
Mclean Hospital
Brief Summary

Resilience is the ability to cope effectively and adapt to a wide range of stressful environmental challenges. Sleep loss has been shown to reduce activity in the brain regions responsible for resilience. The ability to resist the effects of sleep loss appears to be a stable, trait-like quality. This study will attempt to predict individuals' trait-resistance to sleep loss based on their neurobiology.

Detailed Description

Resilience, the ability to cope effectively and adapt to a wide range of stressful environmental challenges, appears to be mediated extensively by the medial prefrontal cortex (MPFC). Sleep deprivation has been shown to reduce metabolic activity throughout the brain, particularly the MPFC. The ability to resist the effects of sleep loss appears to be a stable, trait-like phenomenon that is consistent across situations, suggesting that it may reflect an enduring quality of the underlying neurobiological system. The present study aims to identify the neural basis of resilience and effectively discriminate resistant from vulnerable individuals during an overnight sleep deprivation session. Specifically, the primary aims of this research are 1) to further our understanding of the role of the MPFC in resilience and 2) to develop a statistical prediction algorithm based on multimodal neuroimaging that will reliably discriminate between individuals who are resilient versus vulnerable to the cognitive impairing effects of sleep loss.

Recruitment & Eligibility

Status
COMPLETED
Sex
All
Target Recruitment
48
Inclusion Criteria
  • Age 20-45 years
  • Right handedness as assessed by the Edinburgh Handedness Inventory
  • For women: regular menstrual cycles (duration between 25 and 35 days with no more than 3 day variation between cycle)
Exclusion Criteria
  • History of head injury with loss of consciousness or post-traumatic amnesia, or major neurological illness
  • Medical or neurologic condition that would confound interpretation of results, including alcohol or drug abuse/dependence in the past 6 months, neurological disorders including any history of seizures
  • History of cardiac problems
  • History of major depressive disorder or anxiety disorder
  • Lifetime history of psychotic disorder, including bipolar disorder, schizophrenia, or obsessive compulsive disorder
  • Other DSM-IV diagnosis that could affect interpretation of results
  • Mixed or left handedness
  • Abnormal visual acuity that cannot be corrected by contact lenses
  • Daily caffeine use exceeding 400 mg per day
  • History of smoking or tobacco use in the past year
  • Metal within the body, pregnancy, or other contraindication for MRI procedures
  • Use of drugs or medications that could affect functional neuroimaging results (e.g., fluoxetine, beta-blockers)
  • Psychotropic medication use within the past 6 weeks

Study & Design

Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Study Design
SINGLE_GROUP
Arm && Interventions
GroupInterventionDescription
Sleep deprivationSleep deprivationParticipants will undergo 29 hours of sleep deprivation, 17 of which will be spent in the laboratory.
Primary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Differences in the medial prefrontal cortex (MPFC) as measured by fMRI, DTI, and MRSSession 2 of study (1 week after enrollment)

It is hypothesized that, relative to vulnerable individuals, those who are highly resistant to the adverse effects of sleep loss on cognition will show: 1) increased gray matter volume in the MPFC, 2) greater white matter integrity as indicated by the Diffusion Tensor Imaging measure of fractional anisotropy (FA) values in the MPFC, 3) greater functional activation in MPFC during cognitively demanding tasks, 4) greater functional connectivity between MPFC and alerting regions of the midbrain and thalamus; and 5) different ratios of GABA and glutamate within the MPFC.

Secondary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Psychomotor Vigilance Task (PVT)At sleep deprivation session (2 weeks after enrollment)

The PVT will be administered 17 throughout the overnight sleep deprivation session. PVT performance measures participants' alertness and objective resilience to sleep deprivation. PVT performance will be used as a measure to retrospectively assign participants into sleep loss-resistant and sleep loss-vulnerable groups.

Trial Locations

Locations (1)

McLean Hospital

🇺🇸

Belmont, Massachusetts, United States

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