[Sleep and anesthesia--Part 1, Recent findings in research].
Kushikata. Tetsuya T; Yoshida. Hitoshi H; Yasuda. Tadanobu T; Tose. Ryuji R; Hirota. Kazuyoshi K; Matsuki. Akitomo A
Key Findings
- Sleep and anesthesia appear to involve overlapping neuronal pathways.
- Research on sleep mechanisms may clarify how anesthesia works.
- Disturbances in sleep caused by anesthesia have health and economic impacts.
Practical Outcomes
- For biohackers and self‑experimenters, this paper offers no direct, actionable advice on using the peptide dsip. It is mainly a theoretical discussion without specific protocols, dosages, or measurable benefits for longevity or performance.
Summary
The abstract talks about how modern neuroscience links sleep and anesthesia, suggesting they share some brain mechanisms. It notes that studying sleep could help us understand anesthesia better and that anesthesia‑related sleep problems need fixing for better patient quality of life.
Abstract
We described how modern neuroscience has elucidated what is sleep and its implication, and also reviewed histological and current trends in search of sleep mechanism from view of neurocirculatory or hormonary basis studies. We conclude that anesthesia and sleep share some neuronal structure in their action and mechanism of anesthesia could be elucidated through sleep study. In addition, anesthesia-related sleep disturbance must be settled to serve satisfied quality of life of patients and to save economic and medical resources.
Study Information
pubmed
2007