Parents, please note - make sure that your teenage children get adequate
sleep daily, for a new study has claimed sleep deficiency could affect
their brains later in life.
Researchers at the University of Wisconsin-Madison have carried out the
study and found that sleep-deprived teenagers are at risk of long-term
damage to wiring of their brains, the ’Daily Mail’ reported.
They found that short-term sleep restriction prevents the balanced
growth and depletion of brain synapses, which are the connections
between nerve cells where communication occurs.
“One possible implication of our study is that if you lose too much
sleep during adolescence, especially chronically, there may be lasting
consequences in terms of the wiring of the brain,” said lead researcher
Dr Chiara Cirelli.
Mental illnesses such as schizophrenia tend to start during adolescence
but the exact reasons remain unclear, say the researchers.
“Adolescence is a sensitive period of development during which the brain
changes dramatically. There is a massive remodelling of nerve circuits,
with many new synapses formed and then eliminated,” she said.
For their study, the researchers analysed the brains of mice. They
wanted to see how alterations to the sleep-wake cycle affected the
anatomy of the developing adolescent brain in the animals.
Using a two-photon microscope, the researchers indirectly followed the
growth and retraction of synapses by counting dendritic spines, the
elongated structures that contain synapses and thus allow brain cells to
receive impulses from other brain cells.
They compared adolescent mice that for eight to 10 hours were
spontaneously awake, allowed to sleep or forced to stay awake. The live
images showed that being asleep or awake made a difference in the
dynamic adolescent mouse brain - the overall density of dendritic spines
fell during sleep and rose during spontaneous or forced wakefulness.
“These results using acute manipulations of just eight to 10 hours show
that the time spent asleep or awake affects how many synapses are being
formed or removed in the adolescent brain,” Prof Cirelli said.
She added: “The important next question is what happens with chronic
sleep restriction, a condition that many adolescents are often
experiencing. It could be that the changes are benign, temporary and
reversible or there could be lasting consequences for brain maturation
and functioning.”
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