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John W. Winkelman, Orfeu M. Buxton, J. Eric Jensen, Kathleen L. Benson, Shawn P. O'Connor, Wei Wang, Perry F. Renshaw, Reduced Brain GABA in Primary Insomnia: Preliminary Data from 4T Proton Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy (1H-MRS), Sleep, Volume 31, Issue 11, November 2008, Pages 1499–1506, https://doi.org/10.1093/sleep/31.11.1499
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Abstract
Both basic and clinical data suggest a potential significant role for GABA in the etiology and maintenance of primary insomnia (PI). Proton magnetic resonance spectroscopy (1H-MRS) can non-invasively determine GABA levels in human brain. Our objective was to assess GABA levels in unmedicated individuals with PI, using 1H-MRS.
Matched-groups, cross-sectional study conducted at two university-based hospitals.
Sixteen non-medicated individuals (8 women) with PI (mean age = 37.3 +/− 8.1) and 16 (7 women) well-screened normal sleepers (mean age = 37.6 +/− 4.5).
PI was established with an unstructured clinical interview, a Structured Clinical Interview for DSM-IV (SCID), sleep diary, actigraphy and polysomnography (PSG). 1H-MRS data were collected on a Varian 4 Tesla magnetic resonance imaging/spectroscopy scanner. Global brain GABA levels were averaged from samples in the basal ganglia, thalamus, and temporal, parietal, and occipital white-matter and cortex.
Average brain GABA levels were nearly 30% lower in patients with PI (.18 +/− .06) compared to controls (.25 +/− .11). GABA levels were negatively correlated with wake after sleep onset (WASO) on two independent PSGs (r = −0.71, p = 0.0024 and −0.70, p = 0.0048).
Our preliminary finding of a global reduction in GABA in non-medicated individuals with PI is the first demonstration of a neurochemical difference in the brains of those with PI compared to normal sleeping controls. 1H-MRS is a valuable tool to assess GABA in vivo, and may provide a means to shed further light on the neurobiology of insomnia.
- magnetic resonance imaging
- basal ganglia
- gamma-aminobutyric acid
- neurobiology
- polysomnography
- severe combined immunodeficiency
- spectrum analysis
- thalamus
- brain
- sleep
- insomnia
- diagnostic and statistical manual
- insomnia, primary
- white matter
- causality
- actigraphy
- sleep diary
- proton magnetic resonance spectroscopy
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