Cortico-autonomic local arousals and heightened somatosensory arousability during NREMS of mice in neuropathic pain

Elife. 2021 Jul 6:10:e65835. doi: 10.7554/eLife.65835.

Abstract

Frequent nightly arousals typical for sleep disorders cause daytime fatigue and present health risks. As such arousals are often short, partial, or occur locally within the brain, reliable characterization in rodent models of sleep disorders and in human patients is challenging. We found that the EEG spectral composition of non-rapid eye movement sleep (NREMS) in healthy mice shows an infraslow (~50 s) interval over which microarousals appear preferentially. NREMS could hence be vulnerable to abnormal arousals on this time scale. Chronic pain is well-known to disrupt sleep. In the spared nerve injury (SNI) mouse model of chronic neuropathic pain, we found more numerous local cortical arousals accompanied by heart rate increases in hindlimb primary somatosensory, but not in prelimbic, cortices, although sleep macroarchitecture appeared unaltered. Closed-loop mechanovibrational stimulation further revealed higher sensory arousability. Chronic pain thus preserved conventional sleep measures but resulted in elevated spontaneous and evoked arousability. We develop a novel moment-to-moment probing of NREMS vulnerability and propose that chronic pain-induced sleep complaints arise from perturbed arousability.

Keywords: NREMS; arousal; gamma power; infraslow; insomnia; mouse; neuroscience; spared-nerve-injury.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

MeSH terms

  • Animals
  • Arousal / physiology*
  • Autonomic Nervous System*
  • Brain / physiology
  • Cerebral Cortex / physiology
  • Mice
  • Neuralgia*
  • Sleep / physiology
  • Sleep Initiation and Maintenance Disorders
  • Sleep, REM / physiology*
  • Wakefulness / physiology*

Grants and funding

The funders had no role in study design, data collection and interpretation, or the decision to submit the work for publication.