Isoflurane anesthesia and sleep deprivation trigger delayed and selective sleep alterations
Leesa Joyce, Clara Carrillo Mas, Veronica Meedt, Matthias Kreuzer, Gerhard Schneider, Thomas Fenzl

TL;DR
This study shows that combining sleep deprivation with isoflurane anesthesia leads to long-term changes in sleep quality in mice.
Contribution
The study reveals that pre-anesthetic sleep deprivation causes persistent disruption in REM sleep quality after isoflurane anesthesia.
Findings
Isoflurane causes NREM sleep rebound during recovery sleep in mice.
Pre-anesthetic sleep deprivation leads to a persistent reduction in theta power during REM sleep after anesthesia.
Combined sleep deprivation and isoflurane disrupt REM sleep quality for at least three days.
Abstract
Isoflurane anesthesia (IA) partially compensates NREM sleep (NREMS) and not REM sleep (REMS) requirement, eliciting post-anesthetic REMS rebound. Sleep deprivation triggers compensatory NREMS rebounds and REMS rebounds during recovery sleep as a result of the body’s homeostatic mechanisms. A combination of sleep deprivation and isoflurane anesthesia is common in clinical settings, especially prior to surgeries. This study investigates the effects of pre-anesthetic sleep deprivation on post-anesthetic sleep–wake architecture. The effects of isoflurane exposure (90 min) alone were compared with the effects of isoflurane exposure preceded by experimental sleep deprivation (6 h, gentle handling) on recovery sleep in adult mice by studying the architecture of post-anesthetic sleep for 3 consecutive post-anesthetic days. Effects of isoflurane anesthesia on recovery sleep developed only during…
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Taxonomy
TopicsCooperative Studies and Economics
