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Unexpected REM sleep excess associated with a pontine lesion in multiple sclerosis
Author(s) -
Sinéad Zeidan,
Stefania Redolfi,
Caroline Papeix,
Benedetta Bodini,
Céline Louapre,
Isabelle Arnulf,
Élisabeth Maillart
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
journal of clinical sleep medicine
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.529
H-Index - 92
eISSN - 1550-9397
pISSN - 1550-9389
DOI - 10.5664/jcsm.9114
Subject(s) - medicine , pons , multiple sclerosis , rapid eye movement sleep , sleep (system call) , eye movement , lesion , context (archaeology) , rem sleep behavior disorder , non rapid eye movement sleep , sleep spindle , sleep deprivation , anesthesia , neuroscience , polysomnography , psychology , apnea , ophthalmology , pathology , psychiatry , circadian rhythm , paleontology , biology , computer science , operating system
Sleep disorders are prevalent in patients with multiple sclerosis. In contrast, a frank increase of rapid eye movement (REM) sleep time is a rare phenomenon, mostly described in the context of REM sleep rebound (after sleep deprivation, abrupt withdrawal of antidepressants or neuroleptics, and during the first night of ventilation for severe sleep apnea), but not in link with specific brain lesions. We incidentally found an isolated, marked increase in REM sleep time (200 min, 40% of total sleep time, normative values: 18.2-20.3%) and in rapid eye movements density during REM sleep in a patient with a secondary progressive multiple sclerosis, associated with an anterior pontine demyelinating lesion on magnetic resonance imaging. This result suggests that a network blocking REM sleep in the pons has been damaged.

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