Neural correlates of working memory performance in primary insomnia

To examine neural correlates of working memory performance in patients with primary insomnia (PIs) compared with well-matched good sleepers (GSs). Twenty-five PIs and 25 GSs underwent functional MRI while performing an N-back working memory task. VA hospital sleep laboratory and University-based fun...

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Published inSleep (New York, N.Y.) Vol. 36; no. 9; pp. 1307 - 1316
Main Authors Drummond, Sean P A, Walker, Matthew, Almklov, Erin, Campos, Manuel, Anderson, Dane E, Straus, Laura D
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published United States Associated Professional Sleep Societies, LLC 01.09.2013
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Summary:To examine neural correlates of working memory performance in patients with primary insomnia (PIs) compared with well-matched good sleepers (GSs). Twenty-five PIs and 25 GSs underwent functional MRI while performing an N-back working memory task. VA hospital sleep laboratory and University-based functional imaging center. 25 PIs, 25 GSs. N/A. Although PIs did not differ from GSs in cognitive performance, PIs showed the expected differences from GSs in both self-reported and objective sleep measures. PIs, relative to GSs, showed reduced activation of task-related working memory regions. This manifested both as an overall reduction in activation of task-related regions and specifically as reduced modulation of right dorsolateral prefrontal cortex with increasing task difficulty. Similarly, PIs showed reduced modulation (i.e., reduced deactivation) of default mode regions with increasing task difficulty, relative to GSs. However, PIs showed intact performance. These data establish a profile of abnormal neural function in primary insomnia, reflected both in reduced engagement of task-appropriate brain regions and an inability to modulate task-irrelevant (i.e., default mode) brain areas during working memory performance. These data have implications for better understanding the neuropathophysiology of the well established, yet little understood, discrepancy between ubiquitous subjective cognitive complaints in primary insomnia and the rarely found objective deficits during testing.
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ISSN:0161-8105
1550-9109
DOI:10.5665/sleep.2952