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Attentional failures after sleep deprivation represent moments of cerebrospinal fluid flow

Medicine and Health

Attentional failures after sleep deprivation represent moments of cerebrospinal fluid flow

Z. Yang, S. D. Williams, et al.

Sleep loss doesn't just make you tired — it lets sleep-like pulses of cerebrospinal fluid invade wakefulness, linked to attention lapses and coordinated with neuronal, pupil, and systemic changes. Using simultaneous fast fMRI-EEG, this study reveals that CSF flow surges when attention fails — suggesting a vascular, neuromodulatory mechanism behind sleep-deprivation-related cognitive decline. This research was conducted by the authors present in <Authors>.... show more
Abstract
Sleep deprivation rapidly disrupts cognitive function, and in the long term contributes to neurological disease. Why sleep deprivation has such profound effects on cognition is not well understood. Here, we use simultaneous fast fMRI-EEG to test how sleep deprivation modulates cognitive, neural, and fluid dynamics in the human brain. We demonstrate that after sleep deprivation, sleep-like pulsatile cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) flow events intrude into the awake state. CSF flow is coupled to attentional function, with high flow during attentional impairment. Furthermore, CSF flow is tightly orchestrated in a series of brain-body changes including broadband neuronal shifts, pupil constriction, and altered systemic physiology, pointing to a coupled system of fluid dynamics and neuromodulatory state. The timing of these dynamics is consistent with a vascular mechanism regulated by neuromodulatory state, in which CSF begins to flow outward when attention fails, and flow reverses when attention recovers. The attentional costs of sleep deprivation may thus reflect an irrepressible need for neuronal rest periods and widespread pulsatile fluid flow.
Publisher
bioRxiv
Published On
Nov 15, 2024
Authors
Zinong Yang, Stephanie D. Williams, Ewa Beldzik, Stephanie Anakwe, Emilia Schimmelpfennig, Laura D. Lewis
Tags
sleep deprivation
cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) flow
attention
fast fMRI-EEG
neuromodulatory state
vascular mechanism
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