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research article

Nicotine increases sleep spindle activity

O'Reilly, Christian  
•
Chapotot, Florian
•
Pittau, Francesca
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August 1, 2019
Journal Of Sleep Research

Studies have shown that both nicotine and sleep spindles are associated with enhanced memorisation. Further, a few recent studies have shown how cholinergic input through nicotinic and muscarinic receptors can trigger or modulate sleep processes in general, and sleep spindles in particular. To better understand the interaction between nicotine and sleep spindles, we compared in a single blind randomised study the characteristics of sleep spindles in 10 healthy participants recorded for 2 nights, one with a nicotine patch and one with a sham patch. We investigated differences in sleep spindle duration, amplitude, intra-spindle oscillation frequency and density (i.e. spindles per min). We found that under nicotine, spindles are more numerous (average increase: 0.057 spindles per min; 95% confidence interval: [0.025-0.089]; p = .0004), have higher amplitude (average amplification: 0.260 mu V; confidence interval: [0.119-0.402]; p = .0032) and last longer (average lengthening: 0.025 s; confidence interval: [0.017-0.032]; p = 2.7e-11). These results suggest that nicotine can increase spindle activity by acting on nicotinic acetylcholine receptors, and offer an attractive hypothesis for common mechanisms that may support memorisation improvements previously reported to be associated with nicotine and sleep spindles.

  • Details
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Type
research article
DOI
10.1111/jsr.12800
Web of Science ID

WOS:000476602100031

Author(s)
O'Reilly, Christian  
Chapotot, Florian
Pittau, Francesca
Mella, Nathalie
Picard, Fabienne
Date Issued

2019-08-01

Publisher

WILEY

Published in
Journal Of Sleep Research
Volume

28

Issue

4

Article Number

e12800

Subjects

Clinical Neurology

•

Neurosciences

•

Neurosciences & Neurology

•

automatic detection

•

autosomal dominant nocturnal frontal lobe epilepsy

•

brain rhythms

•

nicotinic acetylcholine receptor

•

non-rapid eye movement

•

acetylcholine-receptors

•

thalamocortical neurons

•

transdermal nicotine

•

lateral geniculate

•

memory

•

oscillations

•

benchmarking

•

attention

•

seizures

Editorial or Peer reviewed

REVIEWED

Written at

EPFL

EPFL units
BBP-GR-HILL  
BBP-CORE  
Available on Infoscience
August 8, 2019
Use this identifier to reference this record
https://infoscience.epfl.ch/handle/20.500.14299/159619
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