A new study conducted by monitoring the brain waves of sleeping
adolescents has found that remarkable changes occur in the brain as it
prunes away neuronal connections and makes the major transition from
childhood to adulthood.
“We’ve provided the first long-term, longitudinal
description of developmental changes that take place in the brains of
youngsters as they sleep,” said Irwin Feinberg, professor emeritus of
psychiatry and behavioural sciences and director of the UC Davis Sleep
Laboratory. “Our outcome confirms that the brain goes through a
remarkable amount of reorganisation during puberty that is necessary for
complex thinking.”
The research, published in the American Journal of Physiology: Regulatory, Integrative and Comparative Physiology,
also confirms that electroencephalogram, or EEG, is a powerful tool for
tracking brain changes during different phases of life, and that it
could potentially be used to help diagnose age-related mental illnesses.
It is the final component in a three-part series of studies carried out
over 10 years and involving more than 3,500 all-night EEG recordings.
The data provide an overall picture of the brain’s electrical behaviour
during the first two decades of life.
Feinberg explained that
scientists have generally assumed that a vast number of synapses are
needed early in life to recover from injury and adapt to changing
environments. These multiple connections, however, impair the efficient
problem solving and logical thinking required later in life. His study
is the first to show how this shift can be detected by measuring the
brain’s electrical activity in the same children over the course of
time.
Two earlier studies by Feinberg and his colleagues showed
that EEG fluctuations during the deepest (delta or slow wave) phase of
sleep, when the brain is most recuperative, consistently declined for 9-
to 18-year-olds. The most rapid decline occurred between the ages of 12
and 16-1/2. This led the team to conclude that the streamlining of
brain activity — or “neuronal pruning" — required for adult cognition
occurs together with the timing of reproductive maturity.
Questions remained, though, about electrical activity patterns in the brains of younger children.
For
the current study, Feinberg and his research team monitored 28 healthy,
sleeping children between the ages of 6 and 10 for two nights every six
months. The new findings show that synaptic density in the cerebral
cortex reaches its peak at age 8 and then begins a slow decline. The
recent findings also confirm that the period of greatest and most
accelerated decline occurs between the ages of 12 and 16-1/2 years, at
which point the drop markedly slows.
“Discovering that such
extensive neuronal remodeling occurs within this 4-1/2 year timeframe
during late adolescence and the early teen years confirms our view that
the sleep EEG indexes a crucial aspect of the timing of brain
development,” said Feinberg.
The latest study also confirms that
EEG sleep analysis is a powerful approach for evaluating adolescent
brain maturation, according to Feinberg. Besides being a relatively
simple, accessible technology for measuring the brain’s electrical
activity, it is more accurate than more cumbersome and expensive
options.
“Structural MRI, for instance, has not been able to
identify the adolescent accelerations and decelerations that are easily
and reliably captured by sleep EEG,” said Feinberg. “We hope our data
can aid the search for the unknown genetic and hormonal biomarkers that
drive those fluctuations. Our data also provide a baseline for seeking
errors in brain development that signify the onset of diseases such as
schizophrenia, which typically first become apparent during adolescence.
Once these underlying processes have been identified, it may become
possible to influence adolescent brain changes in ways that promote
normal development and correct emerging abnormalities.”
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