Circadian Rhythms & Sleep Basics - Tick-Tock Sleep
- Sleep: A reversible state of reduced responsiveness, motor activity, and metabolism, crucial for restoration and memory consolidation.
- Circadian Rhythm: An endogenous biological clock with a cycle of approximately 24 hours, governing the sleep-wake pattern.
- Master clock: Suprachiasmatic Nucleus (SCN) in the hypothalamus.
- Primary synchronizer (zeitgeber): Light, which entrains the SCN.
- Key Regulators:
- Melatonin: Hormone from the pineal gland; its secretion ↑ in darkness, promoting sleep.
- Adenosine: Accumulates during wakefulness, promoting sleep drive (Process S).
- Two-Process Model of Sleep Regulation:
- Process S (Homeostatic): Sleep pressure builds with prolonged wakefulness.
- Process C (Circadian): Oscillating alerting signal from the SCN.
⭐ The SCN controls the timing of sleep but not sleep generation itself; SCN lesions disrupt sleep timing but not total sleep amount over 24 hours.
Sleep Architecture & Stages - Night's Blueprint
- Sleep Cycle: 4-6 cycles/night, each ~90-120 minutes. Alternates NREM & REM.
- Polysomnography (PSG): Key tool; records EEG (brain), EOG (eyes), EMG (muscles).
- NREM Sleep (Non-Rapid Eye Movement; ~75-80%): "Quiescent brain, active body".
- N1 (5-10%): Transition to sleep; light sleep.
- EEG: Theta waves ($4-7$ Hz), vertex sharp waves. EOG: Slow rolling eye movements.
- N2 (45-55%): True sleep onset; majority of sleep.
- EEG: Sleep spindles ($12-14$ Hz), K-complexes.
- N3 (15-25%): Slow Wave Sleep (SWS); deep, restorative sleep.
- EEG: Delta waves ($0.5-2$ Hz, >75 μV amplitude).
- Physiology: ↑Growth Hormone release, ↓cortisol. 📌 "Delta for Deepest".
- N1 (5-10%): Transition to sleep; light sleep.
- REM Sleep (Rapid Eye Movement; ~20-25%): "Active brain ('paradoxical sleep'), paralyzed body".
- EEG: Low voltage, mixed frequency; characteristic "sawtooth" waves.
- EOG: Rapid, conjugate eye movements.
- EMG: Muscle atonia (except diaphragm, extraocular muscles).
- Physiology: Vivid dreaming, memory consolidation. ↑Brain O₂ consumption.
⭐ Most REM sleep occurs in the latter half of the night, with REM periods becoming longer and more frequent as sleep progresses.
Neurobiology of Sleep - Brain's Off Switch
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Key Brain Regions & "Switches":
- SCN (Suprachiasmatic Nucleus): Master circadian clock (hypothalamus); light-sensitive.
- Hypothalamus:
- VLPO (Ventrolateral Preoptic Nucleus): "Sleep switch"; GABAergic.
- LHA (Lateral Hypothalamic Area): "Wake switch"; Orexin/Hypocretin.
- Brainstem:
- ARAS (Ascending Reticular Activating System): Maintains wakefulness (ACh, NE, 5-HT, DA, Histamine).
- Pons (LDT/PPT): REM sleep generation (ACh).
- Thalamus: Sensory gate during sleep.

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Key Neurotransmitters:
- Sleep-Promoting:
- Adenosine: ↑ with wakefulness, ↑ sleep pressure.
- GABA: Major inhibitory NT (e.g., VLPO).
- Melatonin (Pineal): Circadian rhythm, sleep onset.
- Wake-Promoting:
- Orexin/Hypocretin: Stabilizes wakefulness.
- ACh (Acetylcholine): Arousal; ↑ in wake & REM.
- NE (Norepinephrine), 5-HT (Serotonin), DA (Dopamine), Histamine: Promote arousal.
- Sleep-Promoting:
⭐ Orexin (Hypocretin) deficiency, produced in the lateral hypothalamus, is the primary cause of Type 1 Narcolepsy, highlighting its critical role in sustaining wakefulness.
Sleep Functions & Age Variations - Purpose Through Time
- Functions: Restoration (body/brain), memory consolidation, energy conservation, immune regulation.
- Age Variations:
- Infants: ~16-18 hrs/day; ~50% REM; sleep cycles ~50 min.
- Children/Adolescents: ↓ total sleep, ↓ REM %; adolescent phase delay.
- Adults: Stable; SWS (N3) gradually ↓.
- Elderly: ↓ total sleep time, ↓ SWS (N3), ↑ WASO (Wake After Sleep Onset), ↑ fragmentation; phase advance common.
⭐ Neonates have the highest REM sleep proportion (~50% of total sleep), vital for brain development.

High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways
- Sleep comprises NREM (N1, N2, N3/SWS) and REM stages, cycling every 90-120 minutes.
- N3 sleep (Slow-Wave Sleep), with delta waves, is vital for physical restoration.
- REM sleep involves dreaming, muscle atonia, rapid eye movements, and beta waves; crucial for memory consolidation.
- REM periods lengthen progressively through the night's 4-6 sleep cycles.
- Key neurotransmitters: Acetylcholine (↑REM), Serotonin/Norepinephrine (↑Wakefulness, ↓REM), GABA (↑NREM).
- Melatonin regulates circadian rhythms; Stage N3 sleep decreases with age.
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