PMID: 6025128Jun 23, 1967Paper

Sleep: the effect of electroconvulsive shock in cats deprived of REM sleep

Science
H B CohenW C Dement

Abstract

Three cats were deprived of rapid-eye-movement (REM) sleep for 10 days, and three were deprived for 12 days. All cats received an electrically induced convulsion on each of the last 3 days of deprivation, as well as on the 1st recovery day just prior to sleep onset. As controls, four cats were deprived of REM sleep for 12 days and one was deprived for 10 days; the controls received no convulsions. Compensatory increases in REM sleep during recovery days were present in the convulsed animals, but were substantially lower than the recovery increases of control animals. During recovery REM sleep, convulsed cats did not display the exaggerated bursts of eye movements and body twitches seen in the nonconvulsed controls.

References

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Citations

May 1, 1968·Electroencephalography and Clinical Neurophysiology·H B CohenW C Dement
Jun 1, 1977·Physiology & Behavior·A M DelucaS L Chorover
Oct 1, 1978·Journal of Neurochemistry·A GiudittaB Rutigliano
Dec 3, 2014·Neuroscience and Biobehavioral Reviews·Filippo Sean GiorgiUbaldo Bonuccelli
Nov 1, 1971·Journal of Neurochemistry·A DunnN Pagliuca
Oct 1, 1974·Behavioral Biology·R R Drucker-Colin
Apr 1, 1977·Behavioral Biology·W Fishbein, B M Gutwein
Jan 1, 1993·Neuroscience and Biobehavioral Reviews·M S Myslobodsky
Nov 1, 1979·The British Journal of Psychiatry : the Journal of Mental Science·C N Chen
Jan 1, 1976·Postgraduate Medical Journal·R S KalucyA H Crisp
Sep 22, 1972·Science·S S Steiner, S J Ellman

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