2008, Number S2
<< Back Next >>
Rev Med UV 2008; 8 (S2)
Waking as regulator of sleep
Drucker CR, García-García F
Language: Spanish
References: 10
Page: 63-67
PDF size: 621.45 Kb.
ABSTRACT
No abstract
REFERENCES
Harrisson NL. General anesthesia research: aroused from a deep sleep?. Nature neuroscience. 2002;5(10): 928-929.
Allada R. An emerging link between general anesthesia and sleep. PNAS 2008; 105(7): 2257– 2258.
Rojas MJ, Navas JA, Rector DM. Evoked Response Potential Markers for Anesthetic and Behavioral States. Am J Physiol Regul Integr Comp Physiol. 2006; 291(1): R189-96..
Tung A, Mendelson WB. Anesthesia and sleep. Sleep Medicine Reviews 2004; 8: 213–225.
Hartikainen K, Rorarius MG. Cortical responses to auditory stimuli during isoflurane burst suppression anaesthesia. Anaesthesia. 1999; 54(3): 210-4.
Contreras D, Destexhe A, Sejnowski TJ, Steriade M. Spatiotemporal patterns of spindle oscillations in cortex and thalamus. 1997; 17(3): 1179-96.
Cote KA, Epps TM, Campbell KB. The role of the spindle in human information processing of highintensity stimuli during sleep. J. Sleep Res. 2000; 9: 19-26.
Steriade M, Amzica F. Sleep oscillations developing into seizures in corticothalamic systems. Epilepsia. 2003; 44 Suppl 12:9-20.
Niiyama Y, Satoh N, Kutsuzawa O, Hishikawa Y. Electrophysiological evidence suggesting that sensory stimuli of unknown origin induce spontaneous K-complexes. Electroencephalography and clinical Neurophysiology. 1996; 98: 394-400.
Rampin C, Cespuglio R, Chastrette N, Jouvet M. Immobilisation stress induces a paradoxical sleep rebound in rat. Neurosci Lett. 1991 May 27;126(2):113-8.