37 research outputs found
Cerebrospinal fluid sodium rhythms
Background: Cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) sodium levels have been reported to rise during episodic migraine. Since
migraine frequently starts in early morning or late afternoon, we hypothesized that natural sodium chronobiology
may predispose susceptible persons when extracellular CSF sodium increases. Since no mammalian brain sodium
rhythms are known, we designed a study of healthy humans to test if cation rhythms exist in CSF.
Methods: Lumbar CSF was collected every ten minutes at 0.1 mL/min for 24 h from six healthy participants. CSF
sodium and potassium concentrations were measured by ion chromatography, total protein by fluorescent
spectrometry, and osmolarity by freezing point depression. We analyzed cation and protein distributions over the
24 h period and spectral and permutation tests to identify significant rhythms. We applied the False Discovery Rate
method to adjust significance levels for multiple tests and Spearman correlations to compare sodium fluctuations
with potassium, protein, and osmolarity.
Results: The distribution of sodium varied much more than potassium, and there were statistically significant
rhythms at 12 and 1.65 h periods. Curve fitting to the average time course of the mean sodium of all six subjects
revealed the lowest sodium levels at 03.20 h and highest at 08.00 h, a second nadir at 09.50 h and a second peak
at 18.10 h. Sodium levels were not correlated with potassium or protein concentration, or with osmolarity.
Conclusion: These CSF rhythms are the first reports of sodium chronobiology in the human nervous system. The
results are consistent with our hypothesis that rising levels of extracellular sodium may contribute to the timing of
migraine onset. The physiological importance of sodium in the nervous system suggests that these rhythms may
have additional repercussions on ultradian functions
Compulsive Internet Use Among Adolescents: Bidirectional Parent–Child Relationships
Although parents experience growing concerns about their children’s excessive internet use, little is known about the role parents can play to prevent their children from developing Compulsive Internet Use (CIU). The present study addresses associations between internet-specific parenting practices and CIU among adolescents, as well as the bidirectionality of these associations. Two studies were conducted: a cross-sectional study using a representative sample of 4,483 Dutch students and a longitudinal study using a self-selected sample of 510 Dutch adolescents. Results suggest that qualitatively good communication regarding internet use is a promising tool for parents to prevent their teenage children from developing CIU. Besides, parental reactions to excessive internet use and parental rules regarding the content of internet use may help prevent CIU. Strict rules about time of internet use, however, may promote compulsive tendencies. Finally, one opposite link was found whereby CIU predicted a decrease in frequency of parental communication regarding internet use
A Fear-Inducing Odor Alters PER2 and c-Fos Expression in Brain Regions Involved in Fear Memory
Evidence demonstrates that rodents learn to associate a foot shock with time of day, indicating the formation of a fear related time-stamp memory, even in the absence of a functioning SCN. In addition, mice acquire and retain fear memory better during the early day compared to the early night. This type of memory may be regulated by circadian pacemakers outside of the SCN. As a first step in testing the hypothesis that clock genes are involved in the formation of a time-stamp fear memory, we exposed one group of mice to fox feces derived odor (TMT) at ZT 0 and one group at ZT 12 for 4 successive days. A separate group with no exposure to TMT was also included as a control. Animals were sacrificed one day after the last exposure to TMT, and PER2 and c-Fos protein were quantified in the SCN, amygdala, hippocampus, and piriform cortex. Exposure to TMT had a strong effect at ZT 0, decreasing PER2 expression at this time point in most regions except the SCN, and reversing the normal rhythm of PER2 expression in the amygdala and piriform cortex. These changes were accompanied by increased c-Fos expression at ZT0. In contrast, exposure to TMT at ZT 12 abolished the rhythm of PER2 expression in the amygdala. In addition, increased c-Fos expression at ZT 12 was only detected in the central nucleus of the amygdala in the TMT12 group. TMT exposure at either time point did not affect PER2 or c-Fos in the SCN, indicating that under a light-dark cycle, the SCN rhythm is stable in the presence of repeated exposure to a fear-inducing stimulus. Taken together, these results indicate that entrainment to a fear-inducing stimulus leads to changes in PER2 and c-Fos expression that are detected 24 hours following the last exposure to TMT, indicating entrainment of endogenous oscillators in these regions. The observed effects on PER2 expression and c-Fos were stronger during the early day than during the early night, possibly to prepare appropriate systems at ZT 0 to respond to a fear-inducing stimulus
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Time-related dynamics of variation in core clock genes expression levels in tissues relevant to the immune system
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