Why modeling? Mathematical models of the human sleep/wake cycle gives new insights on the pathophysiology of fatal familial insomnia (FFI) - Porque fazer modelos? Modelos matemáticos para ciclo de vigília/sono em humanos, fornecem novos insights na fisiopatologia da insônia família fatal (IFF)
Abstract
FFI, a rare prion disease, constitutes by their wake and sleep
abnormalities a unique pathophysiological model of disease.
Recently, a neurobiological-mathematical model of the human sleep/
wake cycle (MMSWC) developed by Rempe, BestJ and Terman,
reconciles circadian/homeostatic influences with new findings
like the proposed sleep/wake flip-flop switch and REM-NoREM
switch. We attempt now to modeling sleep abnormalities seen in
FFI patients with the hypothesis that different degrees of perturba-tion (activation/deactivation) of circadian and homeostatic drives
are related with sleep findings previously reported. We modeling
our sleep data using MMSWC, where, briefly, the ventrolateral
preoptic neurons (VLPO) and monoaminergic neurons (AMIN)
inhibit each other and are modeled as a system of two ordinary
differential equations. A similar interaction between REM-on and
REM-off was also implemented. Both models were able to produce
simulations that we confront with reanalyzed polysomnograms of
a proven and peculiar case of FFI. IntraREM sleep fragmentation,
the cyclic alternating pattern reported in atypical REM sleep and
the reversal of atypical REM-NoREM presentation, seen in our
case of FFI, can be simulated according the MMSWC by increasing
random and Poisson perturbations on circadian and/or REM-on
inputs. This was made by modifying the term I AMIN that corres-ponds to REM-on equations of this model. These mathematical
models support the hypothesis that in FFI the extended neuronal
network that regulates sleep and wakefulness could be disrupt by
altered circadian/homeostatic and REM inputs