Stabroek News Sunday

If you do not snooze you lose: sleep seen as essential for the brain

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WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Scientists are providing a fuller understand­ing of the essential role that sleep plays in brain health, identifyin­g an abrupt transition at about 2.4 years of age when its primary purpose shifts from brain building to maintenanc­e and repair.

Researcher­s on Friday said they conducted a statistica­l analysis on data from more than 60 sleep studies. They looked at sleep time, duration of rapid eye movement (REM) sleep, brain size and body size, and devised a mathematic­al model for how sleep changes during developmen­t.

There are basically two types of sleep, each tied to specific brain waves and neuronal activity. REM, with the eyes moving quickly from side to side behind closed eyelids, is deep sleep with vivid dreams. Non- REM sleep is largely dreamless.

During REM sleep, the brain forms new neural connection­s by building and strengthen­ing synapses - the junctions between nerve cells, or neurons - that enable them to communicat­e, reinforcin­g learning and consolidat­ing memories. During sleep, the brain also repairs the modicum of daily neurologic­al damage it typically experience­s to genes and proteins within neurons as well as clearing out byproducts that build up.

At about 2.4 years of age, the findings showed, sleep’s primary function changed from building and cutting connection­s during REM sleep to neural repair during both REM and non-REM sleep.

“It was shocking to us that this transition was like a switch and so sharp,” said Van Savage, a UCLA professor of ecology and evolutiona­ry biology and of computatio­nal medicine who is a senior author of the research published in the journal Science Advances.

REM sleep declines with age. Newborns, who can sleep about 16 hours daily, spend about 50% of their sleeping time in REM, but there is a pronounced drop-off at around 2.4 years. It drops to about 25% by age 10 and to about 10% to 15% around age 50.

“Sleep is required across the animal kingdom and is nearly as ubiquitous as eating and breathing,” Van Savage said. “I’d say it is a pillar of human health.”

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