NREM sleep oscillations and their relations with sleep-dependent memory consolidation in early course psychosis and first-degree relatives.
Dan DenisBengi BaranDimitrios MylonasCourtney SpitzerNicolas RaymondChristine TalbotErin KohnkeRobert StickgoldMatcheri KeshavanDara S ManoachPublished in: bioRxiv : the preprint server for biology (2023)
We investigated sleep neurophysiology and memory consolidation in minimally-medicated, early course psychosis patients and unaffected first-degree relatives of patients in a four-night study. Early-course schizophrenia patients had a sleep spindle deficit that correlated with reduced procedural memory consolidation. Although first-degree relatives did not show any deficit in spindles or memory consolidation, the spindles of both relatives and patients showed increased consistency of the temporal coupling of spindles with slow oscillations compared with controls. These results suggest that sleep spindle and memory consolidation deficits are a core feature of schizophrenia. Spindle deficits may be a biomarker of schizophrenia modifiable by treatment, and motivate the development of targeted novel interventions.