Sleep 'Detoxes' The Brain: نیند زہر ختم کرتی ہے

uetian

Senator (1k+ posts)
10-19-2013_12659_1.gif

[h=1]Sleep 'Detoxes' The Brain[/h]
http://www.forbes.com/sites/melaniehaiken/2013/10/18/sleep-detoxes-the-brain-new-research-suggests/

When you sleep, your brain undergoes a mop-up process that removes waste products linked to Alzheimers and dementia, according to new research published yesterday in the online version of Science.

A team of researchers at the University of Rochester Medical Center (URMC) used high-tech imaging to look deep into the brains of mice and discovered that the brain functions differently while asleep than awake, ridding itself of accumulated proteins at a much faster rate. (In mice, that is but researchers use mouse brains because theyre considered surprisingly similar to human brains.)

Led by Maiken Nedergaard, M.D., who co-directs the URMCs Center for Translational Neuromedicine, the researchers discovered that a waste-draining system they call the glymphatic system is ten times more active during sleep than while awake. This nocturnal cleaning system removes proteins called amyloid-beta, which accumulate into the plaques that contribute to Alzheimers disease and dementia.
Nedergaard and her team coined the term glymphatic system last year, when they used new imaging technology known as two-photon microscopy to discover a scrubbing process taking place around brain cells, known as glial cells. The mechanism of this cleanup process is fascinating: Nedergaard and colleagues found that cerebrospinal fluid flows through the spaces between neurons, flushing proteins and other neural waste into the circulatory system and away.
In this years research, they discovered that not only does the glymphatic system kick into high gear only during sleep, but it also mops up significantly more of the toxic protein amyloid-beta, considered a primary culprit in Alzheimers disease. Again using two-photon microscopy, the researchers looked at the timing of this flushing process and discovered that brain cells contract noticeably during sleep, thus expanding the areas between brain cells by as much as 60 percent. With brain cells smaller and the space between them larger, theres more room for the cerebrospinal fluid to move freely.
Likening the changes during sleep to turning on a faucet, Nedergaard says it appears that a sleep state is necessary for this active clearance of the by-products of neural activity to take place. This would offer a convincing explanation of why sleep has such an essential restorative function, she says.
The discovery of the brains nocturnal cleaning service, coupled with previous research out of Washington University showing that levels of beta-amyloid drop during sleep, could open up new avenues of prevention and treatment for Alzheimers and dementia, experts say. Previous research found that depriving mice of sleep led to accumulation of amyloid-beta protein, also in mice. A few years ago, aNew York Times report suggested that new insights into how some peoples brains hold on to beta-amyloid plaques more than others offered new hope for Alzheimers disease breakthroughs.
Ive written before about the dangerous effects of sleep loss on your health, including elevated risk of stroke. Now well need to add the possibility that sleep loss and possibly sleep problems such as apnea could increase your risk of Alzheimers and dementia.

http://www.forbes.com/sites/melaniehaiken/2013/10/18/sleep-detoxes-the-brain-new-research-suggests/


 

uetian

Senator (1k+ posts)
[h=1]Sleep 'boosts brain cell numbers'[/h]
Scientists believe they have discovered a new reason why we need to sleep - it replenishes a type of brain cell.
Sleep ramps up the production of cells that go on to make an insulating material known as myelin which protects our brain's circuitry.
The findings, so far in mice, could lead to insights about sleep's role in brain repair and growth as well as the disease MS, says the Wisconsin team.
The work is in the Journal of Neuroscience.
Dr Chiara Cirelli and colleagues from the University of Wisconsin found that the production rate of the myelin making cells, immature oligodendrocytes, doubled as mice slept.
The increase was most marked during the type of sleep that is associated with dreaming - REM or rapid eye movement sleep - and was driven by genes.
In contrast, the genes involved in cell death and stress responses were turned on when the mice were forced to stay awake.
Precisely why we need to sleep has baffled scientists for centuries. It's obvious that we need to sleep to feel rested and for our mind to function well - but the biological processes that go on as we slumber have only started to be uncovered relatively recently.
Growth and repairDr Cirelli said: "For a long time, sleep researchers focused on how the activity of nerve cells differs when animals are awake versus when they are asleep.
"Now it is clear that the way other supporting cells in the nervous system operate also changes significantly depending on whether the animal is asleep or awake."
The researchers say their findings suggest that sleep loss might aggravate some symptoms of multiple sclerosis (MS), a disease that damages myelin.

In MS, the body's immune system attacks and destroys the myelin coating of nerves in the brain and spinal cord.
Future studies could look at whether or not sleep affects the symptoms of MS, says Dr Cirelli.
Her team is also interested in testing whether lack of sleep, especially during adolescence, may have long-term consequences for the brain.
Sleep appears necessary for our nervous systems to work properly, says the US National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke (NINDS).
Deep sleep coincides with the release of growth hormone in children and young adults. Many of the body's cells also show increased production and reduced breakdown of proteins during deep sleep.
Since proteins are the building blocks needed for cell growth and for repair of damage from factors like stress and ultraviolet rays, deep sleep may truly be "beauty sleep", says NINDS.

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/health-23932577

 

Back
Top