1. Indices of cortical plasticity after therapeutic sleep deprivation in patients with major depressive disorder
- Author
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Christoph Nissen, Marion Kuhn, Florian Mainberger, Aliza Bredl, Elias Wolf, Claus Normann, Sarah Maywald, Maike Michel, Jonathan G. Maier, Nicola Sendelbach, Dieter Riemann, Bernd Feige, Stefan Klöppel, and Anne Eckert
- Subjects
medicine.medical_treatment ,Long-Term Potentiation ,Electroencephalography ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Neuroplasticity ,Humans ,Medicine ,Depressive Disorder, Major ,Neuronal Plasticity ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,Long-term potentiation ,Evoked Potentials, Motor ,medicine.disease ,Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation ,030227 psychiatry ,Transcranial magnetic stimulation ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Clinical Psychology ,Sleep deprivation ,Synaptic plasticity ,Sleep Deprivation ,Antidepressant ,Major depressive disorder ,medicine.symptom ,business ,Neuroscience ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
Background Therapeutic sleep deprivation (SD) presents a unique paradigm to study the neurobiology of major depressive disorder (MDD). However, the rapid antidepressant mechanism, which differs from today's slow first-line treatments, is not sufficiently understood. We recently integrated two prominent hypotheses of MDD and sleep, the synaptic plasticity hypothesis of MDD and the synaptic homeostasis hypothesis of sleep-wake regulation, into a synaptic plasticity model of therapeutic SD in MDD. Here, we further tested this model positing that homeostatically elevating net synaptic strength through therapeutic SD shifts the initially deficient inducibility of associative synaptic long-term potentiation (LTP)-like plasticity in patients with MDD into a more favorable window of associative plasticity. Methods We used paired associative stimulation (PAS), a transcranial magnetic stimulation protocol (TMS), to quantify cortical LTP-like plasticity after one night of therapeutic sleep deprivation in 28 patients with MDD. Results We demonstrate a significantly different inducibility of associative plasticity in clinical responders to therapeutic SD (> 50% improvement on the 6-item Hamilton-Rating-Scale for Depression, n=13) compared to non-responders (n=15), which was driven by a long-term depression (LTD)-like response in SD-non-responders. Indices of global net synaptic strength (wake EEG theta activity, intracortical inhibition and BDNF serum levels) were increased after SD in both groups, with responders showing a generally lower intracortical inhibition than non-responders. Limitations Repetitive assessments prior to and after treatment would be needed to further determine potential mechanisms. Conclusion After a night of therapeutic SD, clinical responders show a significantly higher inducibility of associative LTP-like plasticity than non-responders.
- Published
- 2020