Sleep Fundamentals - The Body's Clock
- Sleep: Reversible state of unconsciousness, defined by specific EEG criteria.
- Wakefulness: State of consciousness, actively maintained by Reticular Activating System (RAS).
- Circadian Rhythms (~24h): Endogenous biological rhythms, entrained by zeitgebers.
- Suprachiasmatic Nucleus (SCN): Hypothalamic master clock. 📌 SCN: "Sun Controller Nucleus".
- Light: Primary zeitgeber; signals via retinohypothalamic tract to SCN; inhibits melatonin.
- Melatonin: Pineal gland hormone (from serotonin); secretion ↑ in darkness, ↓ by light.
- Other Zeitgebers: Social cues, meals, physical activity.
- Polysomnography (PSG) Basics: Key diagnostic tool.
- EEG: Brain waves.
- EOG: Eye movements.
- EMG: Muscle tone.

⭐ Melatonin secretion is maximally inhibited by blue-spectrum light and peaks during subjective night.
Sleep Architecture - Journey Through Night
- Sleep Cycle: 4-6 cycles/night, each 90-110 min. NREM predominates early, REM late.
- 📌 EEG Waves: BATS Drink Blood (Beta [awake], Alpha [drowsy], Theta [N1], Spindles/K-complexes [N2], Delta [N3], Beta [REM]).
- NREM Sleep (Non-Rapid Eye Movement): Stages of progressively deeper sleep.
- Physiological: ↓HR, ↓BP, ↓RR, ↓Temp.
- N1 (Light Sleep): Theta waves.
- N2: Sleep spindles & K-complexes.
⭐ Sleep spindles and K-complexes are hallmarks of N2 sleep.
- N3 (Slow Wave Sleep - SWS): Delta waves >20%. Deepest, restorative sleep.
- REM Sleep (Rapid Eye Movement):
- EEG: Low voltage, mixed frequency (Beta-like), sawtooth waves.
- Features: Rapid eye movements, muscle atonia (except diaphragm, extraocular), vivid dreaming, PGO (Pons-Geniculate-Occipital) waves.
- Age-Related Changes: ↓Total sleep, ↓SWS, ↓REM latency, ↑Wake After Sleep Onset (WASO), ↑N1.

Sleep-Wake Neurobiology - Brain's On/Off Switch
Wakefulness Promoting Systems:
- Reticular Activating System (RAS): Core arousal.
- Locus Coeruleus (LC): Norepinephrine (NE).
- Raphe Nuclei (RN): Serotonin (5-HT).
- Tuberomammillary Nucleus (TMN): Histamine.
- Lateral Hypothalamus (LH): Orexin/Hypocretin - stabilizes wake. 📌 Orexin KEEPS you awake.
- Basal Forebrain (BF) & PPT/LDT: Acetylcholine (ACh).
Sleep Promoting Systems:
- Ventrolateral Preoptic Nucleus (VLPO): GABA, Galanin (inhibits wake centers).
- Adenosine: Builds sleep pressure.
REM Sleep:
- REM-ON: Pedunculopontine Tegmental (PPT) & Laterodorsal Tegmental (LDT) nuclei (ACh).
- REM-OFF: LC (NE), RN (5-HT); VLPO (indirectly).
Flip-Flop Model: Mutual inhibition between wake (RAS, LC, etc.) & sleep (VLPO) areas. Orexin stabilizes wakefulness.

⭐ Orexin (hypocretin) deficiency is the primary cause of narcolepsy type 1.
Sleep Disorders Snippets - When Sleep Goes Wrong
- Insomnia: Difficulty initiating/maintaining sleep (sleep-onset, sleep-maintenance types).
- Narcolepsy Type 1: Tetrad: EDS, Cataplexy, Sleep Paralysis, Hypnagogic/Hypnopompic Hallucinations. Orexin deficiency; HLA-DQB1*06:02.
⭐ Cataplexy in narcolepsy is often triggered by strong emotions.
- Obstructive Sleep Apnea (OSA): Repetitive airway collapse. Snoring, EDS. PSG: AHI >5/hr + symptoms, or >15/hr.
- Parasomnias:
Feature NREM (Sleepwalking, Night Terrors) REM (RBD) Age Children Elderly Stage SWS (N3) REM Clinical Amnesia for event Dream enactment, loss of atonia Association Benign Synucleinopathies
High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways
- REM sleep features muscle atonia, vivid dreams, PGO waves, and an EEG resembling wakefulness.
- NREM Stage N3 (slow-wave sleep) is characterized by delta waves on EEG and is vital for physical restoration.
- The suprachiasmatic nucleus (SCN) in the hypothalamus acts as the primary circadian pacemaker, regulating sleep-wake cycles.
- Orexin/hypocretin from the lateral hypothalamus is crucial for maintaining wakefulness; its deficiency causes narcolepsy.
- Acetylcholine is key for REM sleep initiation and maintenance; serotonin and norepinephrine are important for wakefulness and suppressing REM sleep.
- With ageing, there is typically a decrease in total sleep time, REM sleep percentage, and especially slow-wave sleep (N3).
Continue reading on Oncourse
Sign up for free to access the full lesson, plus unlimited questions, flashcards, AI-powered notes, and more.
CONTINUE READING — FREEor get the app