Contact:
Christine Guilfoy
Office: (301) 634-7253
cguilfoy@the-aps.org
Brain Wave Changes
In Adolescence Signal Reorganization Of The Brain
Girls’ brains reorganize earlier than boys
Bethesda, Md (Dec. 6, 2006) –
Brain wave changes in adolescence are related to age, not sexual maturation,
and may be associated with one of the brain’s major reorganization projects:
synaptic pruning, a new study finds.
The study, “The adolescent
decline of NREM delta, an indicator of brain maturation, is linked to age
and sex but not to pubertal stage,” was undertaken by Irwin Feinberg, Lisa
M. Higgins, Wong Yu Khaw and Ian G. Campbell, all of the University of
California, Davis. The American Physiological Society published the
study, which appears in the December issue of the American Journal of
Physiology-Regulatory, Integrative and Comparative Physiology.
In childhood, the brain has
many synapses -- small junctions between neurons that transmit signals. The
more junctions there are, the more intense the brain activity. During
adolescence, the brain reorganizes and eliminates many synaptic connections,
a process known as synaptic pruning.
This pruning makes the brain’s
information processing more efficient and powerful while consuming less
energy. Previous studies have found that there is a steep decline in sleep
slow wave activity, the delta wave, during adolescence. The authors
hypothesized that the decline is caused by age-programmed synaptic pruning.
Brain
changes begin at age 11
This study followed two groups
of children over the course of two years: 31 children were nine years old at
the beginning of the study. Thirty-eight children were 12 years old.
The researchers used an
in-home electroencephalograph (EEG) to record the children’s brain activity
during sleep. Measurements were taken at six-month intervals and analyzed by
computer. The researchers also recorded sexual maturity and physical growth
(height, weight and body mass index) at each interval.
They found delta wave
intensity across the 9-11 age group was:
They found delta wave
intensity across the 12-14 year group:
-
declined by 25%
-
was
related to age but unrelated to physical growth and sexual maturation
-
was
related to gender, with lower intensity in girls than boys because girls
begin the brain reorganization sooner
-
was
unrelated to the later bed times and reduction in total sleep time that
occurs during adolescence
Changes
related to age
Previous studies had shown a
delta wave activity decline of 50% between ages 10 and 20, but it was
unclear when the change began and whether there were gender differences,
Feinberg said. This study shows that changes in delta wave activity during
sleep begin at about 11 years of age and declines 25% by age 14.
The gender difference observed
in delta intensity among the 12-14 year old children suggests that girls, on
average, begin adolescent brain maturation at least one year earlier than
boys. However, once they begin this maturational process, it proceeds at the
same rate in both sexes. Also, previous research had not resolved whether
these changes are related to sexual maturation. This study suggests the
change in delta wave activity occurs with age, not sexual maturity.
“It may seem surprising that
age is the (predominant) factor in the delta power density decline,” the
authors wrote. “However, many maturational events in the development of the
nervous system proceed on a programmed schedule.” It is still possible,
however, that the unknown brain stimulus that initiates sexual maturation in
adolescence also initiates the changes in the brain, but that the processes
then proceed independently.
“Longitudinal sleep EEG
measurement could also provide a new arena for clinical studies of subjects
at high risk of schizophrenia and other neurodevelopmental disorders,” the
authors noted. The emergence of schizophrenia during adolescence and the
dramatic change in delta wave activity during that time might both be
related to synaptic pruning, Feinberg said. “It is possible that sleep EEG
changes will prove a relatively direct indicator of synaptic pruning,” the
authors concluded
Funding
This study
was supported by a grant from the U.S. Public Health Service.
Editor’s note: The
media may arrange an interview with a member of the research team by
contacting Christine Guilfoy, American Physiological Society, (301) 634-7253
or
cguilfoy@the-aps.org.
* * *
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