Effects of experimental sleep deprivation on anxiety-like behavior in animal research: Systematic review and meta-analysis

Date
2016Author
Pires, Gabriel Natan [UNIFESP]
Bezerra, Andreia Gomes [UNIFESP]
Tufik, Sergio [UNIFESP]
Andersen, Monica Levy [UNIFESP]
Type
RevisãoISSN
0149-7634DOI
10.1016/j.neubiorev.2016.06.028Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
Increased acute anxiety is a commonly reported behavioral consequence of sleep deprivation in humans. However, rodent studies conducted so far produced inconsistent results, failing to reproduce the same sleep deprivation induced-anxiety observed in clinical experiments. While some presented anxiogenesis as result of sleep deprivation, others reported anxiolysis. In face of such inconsistencies, this article explores the effects of experimental sleep deprivation on anxiety-like behavior in animal research through a systematic review and a series of meta-analyses. A total of 50 of articles met our inclusion criteria, 30 on mice, 19 on rats and one on Zebrafish. Our review shows that sleep deprivation induces a decrease in anxiety-like behavior in preclinical models, which is opposite to results observed in human settings. These results were corroborated in stratified analyses according to species, sleep deprivation method and anxiety measurement technique. In conclusion, the use of animal models for the evaluation of the relationship between sleep deprivation lacks translational applicability and new experimental tools are needed to properly evaluate sleep deprivation-induced anxiogenesis in rodents. (C) 2016 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
Citation
Neuroscience And Biobehavioral Reviews. Oxford, v. 68, p. 575-589, 2016.Keywords
Animal behaviorAnimal models
Anxiety
Elevated-plus-maze
Meta-analysis
Sleep
Sleep deprivation
Systematic review
Sponsorship
Associacao Fundo de Incentivo a Pesquisa (AFIP)National Council of Technological and Scientific Development (CNPq)
Sao Paulo Research Foundation (FAPESP)
Collections
- EPM - Artigos [17701]