Current:Home > StocksPulling an all-nighter is a temporary antidepressant -Infinite Profit Zone
Pulling an all-nighter is a temporary antidepressant
SignalHub View
Date:2025-04-10 21:36:59
What your parents didn't tell you about pulling an all-nighter? It might just ease depression for several days. At least, that's what researchers found happened to mice in a study published in the journal Neuron Thursday.
Most people who've stayed up all night know the "tired and wired" feeling they get the next day. The body might be exhausted, but the brain feels jittery, hyperactive or even giddy. Even after these changes wear off, sleep loss can have a strong antidepressant effect in people that lasts several days.
But researchers hadn't figured out why sleeplessness might have this effect —until this study from neurobiologists at Northwestern University.
The morning after a sleepless night
To study all of this, the team looked at the effects of sleep loss in mice. They induced sleep loss in some of the mice, while the others got a typical night's rest.
They found that after this sleepless night, the mice were more excitable, more aggressive, more sexual and less depressed than mice that got a regular amount of sleep.
Of course, researchers can't just ask mice whether they feel "less depressed." Instead, they created a depression-like state in all the mice before either disrupting their sleep or allowing them to rest by repeatedly giving them small shocks. In response to these shocks, the mice entered a depressive-like state and eventually stopped trying to escape their cages.
Then, they tested the mice's response to shocks again. The ones that had stayed up all night showed a reversed depressive state, indicated by more attempts to escape the shocks.
What causes these changes in mice?
Dopamine is responsible for the brain's reward response. Changes in the brain's dopamine system have also been implicated in conditions like depression and in sleep regulation.
And so, to see how the mice's brains responded to their sleepless night, the researchers measured dopamine neuron activity. They saw that sleep-deprived mice showed higher dopamine activity in three regions: the prefrontal cortex, nucleus accumbens and hypothalamus.
But this still didn't tell the researchers which areas were related to the antidepressant effects they saw in the mice.
To figure that out, they silenced dopamine reactions in each of these areas of the brain. The antidepressant effect persisted in the mice except when the team silenced the dopamine input in the prefrontal cortex. That's why Northwestern University neurobiologist Yevgenia Kozorovitskiy, who oversaw the study, says that this region may be important in the search for new depression treatments.
Neuroplasticity and sleep loss
Researchers think that transitions between affects — like a depressed state and a non-depressed state — are mediated by neuroplasticity, or the brain's ability to reorganize connections and structures.
Based on their findings in the prefrontal cortex, Kozorovitskiy and her team looked at individual neurons in this area for signs of growth or neuroplasticity. They saw evidence of the early stages of new connections, suggesting that dopamine had rewired neurons in the mice brains to maintain their mood for several days.
Kozorovitskiy says this work may help scientists understand how human moods transition naturally and why some drugs like ketamine have fast-acting effects on mood.
At the same time, scientists have known that chronic sleep loss in humans leads to health problems, so the researchers do not recommend that people start staying up all night to ease depression.
Got science to share? Email us at [email protected].
Listen to Short Wave on Spotify, Apple Podcasts and Google Podcasts.
Today's episode was produced by Rachel Carlson and Michael Levitt. It was edited by Amina Khan, Christopher Intagliata and Viet Le. Anil Oza checked the facts. Stu Rushfield and Josh Newell were the audio engineers.
veryGood! (4438)
Related
- Moving abroad can be expensive: These 5 countries will 'pay' you to move there
- Ohio white lung pneumonia cases not linked to China outbreak or novel pathogen, experts say
- Beyoncé Drops Surprise Song “My House” After Renaissance Film Release
- Big Oil Leads at COP28
- New Mexico governor seeks funding to recycle fracking water, expand preschool, treat mental health
- Largest US publisher, bestselling authors sue over Iowa book ban
- Palestinian student in Vermont describes realizing he was shot: An extreme spike of pain
- Woman survives falling hundreds of feet on Mt. Hood: I owe them my life
- 'As foretold in the prophecy': Elon Musk and internet react as Tesla stock hits $420 all
- Biden rule aims to reduce methane emissions, targeting US oil and gas industry for global warming
Ranking
- Taylor Swift makes surprise visit to Kansas City children’s hospital
- US proposes plan to protect the snow-dependent Canada lynx before warming shrinks its habitat
- Bolivia’s Indigenous women climbers fear for their future as the Andean glaciers melt
- Texas judge rips into Biden administration’s handling of border in dispute over razor wire barrier
- Rams vs. 49ers highlights: LA wins rainy defensive struggle in key divisional game
- Oklahoma executes Philip Dean Hancock, who claimed self-defense in double homicide
- HGTV's Hilary Farr Leaving Love It or List It After 19 Seasons
- Goalie goal! Pittsburgh Penguins' Tristan Jarry scores clincher against Lightning
Recommendation
2 killed, 3 injured in shooting at makeshift club in Houston
Detroit Red Wings captain Dylan Larkin: Wife and I lost baby due in April
'Santa! I know him!' How to watch 'Elf' this holiday: TV listings, streaming and more
A secret trip by Henry Kissinger grew into a half-century-long relationship with China
Tom Holland's New Venture Revealed
Has COP28 President Sultan al-Jaber Used the UN Climate Summit to Advance the Interests of UAE’s Oil Company?
DeSantis says Florida GOP chair should resign amid rape allegation
Venezuela’s government and opposition agree on appeal process for candidates banned from running