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1.
J Sleep Res ; 30(2): e13093, 2021 04.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32441868

ABSTRACT

Systemic inflammation is thought to mediate the link between sleep and cardiovascular outcomes, but previous studies on sleep habits and inflammation markers have found inconsistent results. This study investigated the relationship between sleep characteristics and C-reactive protein (CRP), interleukin-6 (IL-6) and tumor necrosis factor α (TNFα). A representative sample of 319 Swedish women was randomly selected from the general population for in-home polysomnography, sleep questionnaire and blood samples. As variables were highly correlated, principal component analysis was used to reduce the number of original variables. Linear regression with log-transformation of the outcomes (lnCRP, lnIL-6 and lnTNFα) and quantile regression were fitted to estimate cross-sectional relationships. Multivariable linear regression models suggested a significant association of insomnia symptoms (self-reported) with higher lnCRP levels (ß = 0.11; 95% confidence interval [CI] = 0.02; 0.21), but not with lnIL-6 and lnTNFα. From quantile regression analysis we found that a high non-restorative index (subjective) and insomnia symptoms (self-reported) were associated with higher values of CRP, especially in the highest quantiles of the CRP distribution (90th percentile: ß = 0.71; 95% CI = 0.17; 1.24. ß = 1.23; 95% CI = 0.44; 2.02, respectively). Additionally, higher amounts of rapid eye movement (REM) sleep were associated with lower CRP values (90th percentile: ß = -0.80; 95% CI = -0.14; -1.46). In conclusion, sleep disturbances (self-reported), specifically difficulties maintaining sleep and early morning awakenings, but not sleep duration (neither subjective nor objective), were associated with higher CRP levels. No association was found with IL-6 or TNFα. Elevated REM sleep was associated with lower CRP levels. The results suggest that inflammation might be an intermediate mechanism linking sleep and health in women.


Subject(s)
Biomarkers/blood , Inflammation/complications , Polysomnography/methods , Sleep Wake Disorders/diagnosis , Sleep/ethics , Adult , Aged , Cross-Sectional Studies , Female , Humans , Middle Aged , Sweden , Young Adult
2.
Bioethics ; 34(2): 183-189, 2020 02.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31577855

ABSTRACT

Recent approaches in the medical and social sciences have begun to lay stress on "plasticity" as a key feature of human physiological experiences. Plasticity helps to account for significant differences within and between populations, particularly in relation to variations in basic physiological processes, such as brain development, and, in the context of this article, daily sleep needs. This article proposes a novel basis for the redevelopment of institutions in accordance with growing awareness of human variation in physiological needs, and articulates a theory of multibiologism. This approach seeks to expand the range of "normal" physiological experiences to respond to human plasticity, but also to move beyond critiques of medical practice that see medicine as simply responding to capitalist demands through the medicalization of "natural" processes. Instead, by focusing on how the institutions of U.S. everyday life-work, family, and school-structure the lives of individuals and produce certain forms of sleep as pathological, this article proposes that minor alterations in institutions could result in less pathologization for individuals and communities. Multibiologism provides a foundation for shared priorities in the social sciences, in bioethics, and in medical practice, and may lay the groundwork for emergent collaborations in institutional reform.


Subject(s)
Adaptation, Physiological , Medicalization/ethics , Schools , Sleep/ethics , Social Norms , Work Schedule Tolerance , Adolescent , Adult , Child , Humans , Middle Aged , Work-Life Balance
3.
Neuropsychobiology ; 72(3-4): 188-94, 2015.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26900685

ABSTRACT

The pharmaceutical industry has been suffering from low clinical success rates of new drugs for some time with particularly high attrition in early clinical development, especially for drugs aimed at central targets. Both pharmaco-electroencephalography (EEG) and pharmaco-sleep, along with other biomarker techniques, have significant potential to assist with this problem by enabling early decisions to be made about the likelihood of a compound proving successful in the clinic. This paper discusses the role and points of application of biomarker techniques in early drug development. It proposes a framework for the use of pharmaco-EEG and pharmaco-sleep in drug development that (i) relies on the combination of preclinical data and an understanding of translatability to generate robust hypotheses for testing in early clinical studies and (ii) is backed up by a clear decision-making process. The areas that need further development before this framework can be put fully into practice are discussed, along with some possible routes by which this could be achieved through precompetitive co-operation within the industry.


Subject(s)
Decision Making , Drug Design , Sleep/physiology , Translational Research, Biomedical , Animals , Biomarkers/metabolism , Central Nervous System/drug effects , Electroencephalography/methods , Humans , Polysomnography , Sleep/drug effects , Sleep/ethics
5.
Rev. Asoc. Esp. Neuropsiquiatr ; 34(123): 559-570, jul.-sept. 2014.
Article in Spanish | IBECS | ID: ibc-125478

ABSTRACT

El objetivo de este artículo es desarrollar una serie de líneas de reflexión que se articulan en torno a la cuestión del pensamiento en psicoanálisis. La idea central es que pensar en psicoanálisis es pensar sobre el límite y que ese pensar se ubica allí donde el propio pensamiento encuentra su límite. Para mostrar esto partiremos de dos dimensiones de la elaboración freudiana (el límite en el pensamiento de la capacidad asociativa y el límite en el pensamiento de la escena) para, a continuación, analizar la importancia del concepto de límite en el pensamiento y la conceptualización teórica en psicoanálisis. Es esta orientación del pensamiento hacia un límite que implica el psicoanálisis, la razón de su radicalidad y de su irreductible dificultad de formalización y transmisión (AU)


The aim of this paper is to develop some lines of reflection that put together around the question of thinking in psychoanalysis. The central idea is that thinking in psychoanalysis is thinking about limit and that such thinking is there where the own thought finds its limit. To show this we’ll begin with two dimensions of the Freudian elaboration (the limit in the thinking of the associative capacity and the limit on the thinking of the scene) to continue with the analysis of the importance of the concept of limit in thought and the theoretical conceptualization in psychoanalysis. It is this approach of thinking towards a limit involving psychoanalysis, the reason of its radicalism and its irreducible difficulty of formalization and transmission (AU)


Subject(s)
Humans , Male , Female , Psychoanalysis/instrumentation , Psychoanalysis/methods , Psychoanalysis/standards , Thinking , Psychoanalysis/organization & administration , Psychoanalysis/trends , Sleep Initiation and Maintenance Disorders/prevention & control , Sleep Initiation and Maintenance Disorders/psychology , Sleep/ethics
6.
Bioethics ; 28(8): 436-45, 2014 Oct.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23278474

ABSTRACT

The neuro-enhancement Modafinil promises to dramatically increase users' waking hours without much sacrifice to clarity of thought and without serious side effects (inducing addiction). For Modafinil to be advantageous, its usage must enable access to goods that themselves improve the quality of one's life. I draw attention to a variety of conditions that must be met for an experience, activity or object to improve the quality of one's life, such as positional, relational, and saturation conditions, as well as it's being good for its own sake. I discuss and describe the contexts in which widespread usage (legal or not) of Modafinil would undermine these conditions being met, and thus users would fail to significantly improve the quality of their lives and would in fact potentially make both themselves and nonusers worse off in important respects thus far overlooked by critics. In the right contexts, where free time is protected and prolonged, Modafinil does have a variety of potential benefits including, most interestingly, a distinctive form of agency possible only in free time. The potential disadvantages and advantages highlighted in this article are relevant not only to public institutions deciding whether to legalize Modafinil's use as an enhancement but also to individuals deciding whether to use it illegally, as well as to the questions of how and whether to alter key features of one's context (e.g. regulating work hours or extending social services) rather than, or in addition, to regulating the use of enhancement drugs such as Modafinil.


Subject(s)
Benzhydryl Compounds , Choice Behavior , Quality of Life , Sleep , Wakefulness-Promoting Agents , Wakefulness , Benzhydryl Compounds/administration & dosage , Choice Behavior/ethics , Drug Prescriptions , Ethical Analysis , Ethical Theory , Humans , Modafinil , Sleep/drug effects , Sleep/ethics , Wakefulness/drug effects , Wakefulness/ethics , Wakefulness-Promoting Agents/administration & dosage
7.
J Med Ethics ; 34(9): e9, 2008 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-18757628

ABSTRACT

This paper deals with new pharmacological and technological developments in the manipulation and curtailment of our sleep needs. While humans have used various methods throughout history to lengthen diurnal wakefulness, recent advances have been achieved in manipulating the architecture of the brain states involved in sleep. The progress suggests that we will gradually become able to drastically manipulate our natural sleep-wake cycle. Our goal here is to promote discussion on the desirability and acceptability of enhancing our control over biological sleep, by illustrating various potential attendant ethical problems. We draw attention to the risks involved, possible conflicts of interests underlying the development of wake enhancement, and the potential impact on accountability for fatigue related errors.


Subject(s)
Central Nervous System Stimulants/pharmacology , Circadian Rhythm/ethics , Sleep/ethics , Wakefulness/ethics , Accident Prevention/methods , Adolescent , Adult , Age Factors , Aged , Aged, 80 and over , Child , Child, Preschool , Circadian Rhythm/drug effects , Circadian Rhythm/physiology , Fatigue , Humans , Infant , Middle Aged , Risk Factors , Sleep/drug effects , Sleep/physiology , Sleep Deprivation , Sleep Stages/drug effects , Sleep Stages/ethics , Sleep Stages/physiology , Wakefulness/drug effects , Wakefulness/physiology
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