Abstract
Insomnia disorder has been associated with poor executive functioning. Functional imaging studies of executive functioning in insomnia are scarce and inconclusive. Because the Attentional Network Test relies on well-defined cortical networks and sensitively distinguishes different aspects of executive function, it might reveal brain functional alterations in relatively small samples of patients. The current pilot study assessed functional connectivity during the Attentional Network Test performed using magnetic resonance imaging in 12 participants with insomnia and 13 self-defined good sleepers. ANCOVAs were used to evaluate group differences in performance and functional connectivity in the regions of interest representing the attentional networks (i.e. alerting, orienting and executive control) at p < 0.05, uncorrected. During the orienting part, participants with insomnia showed weaker connectivity of the precentral gyrus with the superior parietal lobe (false discovery rate-corrected), while they showed stronger connectivity between premotor and visual regions. Individual differences in connectivity between premotor and visual regions correlated inversely with reaction time. Reaction times suggested more efficient executive control in participants with insomnia compared with good sleepers. During the executive control part, participants with insomnia showed stronger connectivity of thalamic parts of the arousal circuit with the middle frontal and the occipital gyri. Conversely, connectivity between the inferior and superior frontal gyri was weaker. Participants with insomnia seem to recruit more cortical resources in visuo-motor regions to orient attention than good sleepers do, and seem to have enhanced executive control that relates to stronger connectivity of arousal-related thalamic areas. This latter result should be treated with caution and requires confirmation.
Original language | English |
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Article number | e13796 |
Pages (from-to) | 1-10 |
Number of pages | 10 |
Journal | Journal of Sleep Research |
Volume | 32 |
Issue number | 3 |
Early online date | 27 Nov 2022 |
DOIs | |
Publication status | Published - Jun 2023 |
Bibliographical note
Funding Information:The authors would like to thank the students that helped with data collection as well as participants for their active contribution to these results. This study has been supported by funding from the European Research Council ERC‐ADG‐2014‐671084 INSOMNIA. Oti Lakbila‐Kamal was supported by a Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam University Research Fellowship.
Funding Information:
H2020 European Research Council, Grant/Award Number: ERC‐ADG‐2014‐671084 INSOMNIA; Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam University, Grant/Award Number: Research Fellowship Funding information
Funding Information:
The authors would like to thank the students that helped with data collection as well as participants for their active contribution to these results. This study has been supported by funding from the European Research Council ERC-ADG-2014-671084 INSOMNIA. Oti Lakbila-Kamal was supported by a Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam University Research Fellowship.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2022 European Sleep Research Society.
Funding
The authors would like to thank the students that helped with data collection as well as participants for their active contribution to these results. This study has been supported by funding from the European Research Council ERC‐ADG‐2014‐671084 INSOMNIA. Oti Lakbila‐Kamal was supported by a Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam University Research Fellowship. H2020 European Research Council, Grant/Award Number: ERC‐ADG‐2014‐671084 INSOMNIA; Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam University, Grant/Award Number: Research Fellowship Funding information The authors would like to thank the students that helped with data collection as well as participants for their active contribution to these results. This study has been supported by funding from the European Research Council ERC-ADG-2014-671084 INSOMNIA. Oti Lakbila-Kamal was supported by a Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam University Research Fellowship.
Funders | Funder number |
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European Research Council ERC‐ADG‐2014‐671084 INSOMNIA | |
Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam University | |
Horizon 2020 Framework Programme | 671084 |
H2020 European Research Council | |
European Research Council | ERC-ADG-2014-671084 |
Keywords
- attentional network test
- executive control
- frontal gyrus
- hyperarousal
- task-based functional magnetic resonance imaging