Generic placeholder image

CNS & Neurological Disorders - Drug Targets

Editor-in-Chief

ISSN (Print): 1871-5273
ISSN (Online): 1996-3181

Review Article

Neurobehavioral and Cognitive Changes Induced by Sleep Deprivation in Healthy Volunteers

Author(s): Catherine Cassé-Perrot, Laura Lanteaume, Julie Deguil, Régis Bordet, Alexandra Auffret, Lisa Otten, Olivier Blin, David Bartrés-Faz and Joëlle Micallef

Volume 15, Issue 7, 2016

Page: [777 - 801] Pages: 25

DOI: 10.2174/1871527315666160518125156

Price: $65

Abstract

To this day, the pharmacological treatment of Alzheimer’s disease remains limited to the temporary stabilisation of cognitive decline and the reduction of neuropsychiatric symptoms. It is moreover with great difficulty to predict and select promising drug candidates in the early stages of the discovery and developmental process. In this context, scientists have developed new experimental paradigms to artificially induce transient cognitive impairments in healthy volunteers akin to those observed in Alzheimer’s disease, i.e. the Cognitive Challenge Models. In the last decade, a great amount of literature on Sleep Deprivation was published which mainly focused on the consequences of sleep loss for public health. However, sleep deprivation paradigm may also be regarded as a cognitive challenge model. It is commonly accepted that sleep deprivation induces cognitive impairments related to a global decrease in vigilance, while in fact, there is a controversial approach related to the selective effects on cognitive functions. The identification and validation of cognitive challenge models in healthy volunteers are suitable in early clinical development of drugs to determine the ‘hint of efficacy’ of drug candidates. The present review aims at exploring in detail the methods, designs and cognitive paradigms used in non pharmacological sleep deprivation studies. Sleep deprivation can be induced by different methods. Probing the four main cognitive functions will allow identifying the extent to which different sleep deprivation designs selectively compromise executive function, working memory, episodic memory and attention. Findings will be discussed in line with cognitive processing levels that are required according to the tasks.

Keywords: Alzheimer disease, cognitive functioning, cognitive tests, compensatory mechanism, healthy volunteers, model, sleep deprivation.


Rights & Permissions Print Cite
© 2024 Bentham Science Publishers | Privacy Policy