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The Journal of Neuroscience, May 15, 2000, 20(10):3830-3842
Effect of Lesions of the Ventrolateral Preoptic Nucleus on NREM
and REM Sleep
Jun
Lu1,
Mary Ann
Greco2,
Priyattam
Shiromani2, and
Clifford B.
Saper1, 3
1 Department of Neurology and 3 Program in
Neuroscience, Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center, Harvard Medical
School, Boston, Massachusetts 02215, and 2 Department of
Psychiatry, Brockton Veterans Administration Hospital, Harvard Medical
School, Boston, Massachusetts 02115
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ABSTRACT |
Neurons in the ventrolateral preoptic nucleus (VLPO) in rats show
c-fos activation after sleep and provide GABAergic innervation of the major monoamine arousal systems, suggesting that they may be a
necessary part of the brain circuitry that produces sleep. We examined
the effects on sleep behavior in rats of cell-specific damage to the
VLPO by microinjection of ibotenic acid. Severe lesions of the central
cell cluster of the VLPO (~80-90% cell loss bilaterally) caused a
60-70% decrease in delta power and a 50-60% decrease in
nonrapid-eye-movement (NREM) sleep time (p < 0.001). The number of remaining Fos-immunoreactive neurons in the
VLPO cell cluster was linearly related to NREM sleep time (r = 0.77; p < 0.001) and
total electroencephalogram delta power (r = 0.79;
p < 0.001) but not to rapid-eye-movement (REM)
sleep (r = 0.35; p > 0.10).
Lesions in the region containing scattered VLPO neurons medial or
dorsal to the cell cluster caused smaller changes in NREM sleep time
(24.5 or 15%, respectively) but were more closely associated with loss
of REM sleep (r = 0.74; p < 0.01). The insomnia caused by bilateral VLPO lesions persisted for at
least 3 weeks. Lesions of the VLPO caused no change in mean body
temperature or its circadian variation; after small lesions of the
ventromedial preoptic nucleus, body temperature showed normal circadian
variation but a wider temperature range, and sleep behavior was not
affected. These experiments delineate distinct preoptic sites with
primary effects on the regulation of NREM sleep, REM sleep, and body temperature.
Key words:
preoptic area; hypothalamus; REM sleep; NREM sleep; thermoregulation; circadian rhythms
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INTRODUCTION |
The involvement of the preoptic area
and adjacent basal forebrain in sleep regulation has been recognized
since von Economo (1930) reported that lesions of this region cause
prolonged insomnia in humans. Nauta (1946) demonstrated that
preoptic-basal forebrain lesions cause insomnia in rats, and Sterman
and Clemente (1962a ,b ) demonstrated similar effects in cats.
These experimental studies used electrolytic or mechanical lesions that
not only destroyed neuronal cell bodies but also damaged fibers of
passage. More recent studies using chemical toxins to ablate the
neuronal cell bodies in this area in rats and cats have confirmed the
production of insomnia (Szymusiak and McGinty, 1986 ; Sallanon et al.,
1989 ; John and Kumar, 1998 ). However, these studies used large lesions and hence could not identify a specific neuronal population that was
responsible for the deficit in sleep regulation.
Recently, Sherin et al. (1996) identified a specific population of
neurons in the ventrolateral preoptic nucleus (VLPO) that show Fos
immunoreactivity after sleep (sleep-positive neurons). The number of
Fos-immunoreactive (-IR) neurons in this region was directly
proportional to the number of minutes of sleep during the previous hour
(Sherin et al., 1996 ), in good agreement with electrophysiological
studies showing that sleep-active neurons, with firing rates two to
three times faster during sleep than during wakefulness, are
particularly numerous in the VLPO (Alam et al., 1995 ; Szymusiak et al.,
1998 ).
The sleep-positive neurons in the VLPO innervate the histaminergic
neurons in the tuberomammillary nucleus (TMN) (Sherin et al., 1996 ).
These projections originate from a dense cluster of VLPO neurons just
lateral to the optic chiasm, as well as from a more diffuse population
of cells that extends dorsally and medially from this cluster (the
extended VLPO). Approximately 80% of the neurons in this population
contain the inhibitory neurotransmitters GABA and galanin.
Histaminergic neurons in the TMN are believed to play a key role in
promoting wakefulness (Lin et al., 1988 , 1996 ; Steininger et al.,
1999 ); inhibition of these neurons by the VLPO is thought to play a
major role in causing sleep. Steininger et al. (1997) and Yang and
Hatton (1997) have shown that electrical stimulation in the VLPO region
causes GABAA receptor-mediated hyperpolarization
and inhibition of TMN neurons in brain slices.
These results suggest that the VLPO may play an important role in
promoting sleep. The preoptic area, however, is also involved in
thermoregulation, and alterations in body temperature can affect sleep
(Szymusiak et al., 1991 ; McGinty et al., 1994 ). We therefore sought to
characterize more precisely whether damage specifically to VLPO neurons
may cause insomnia and whether this was associated with changes in body
temperature. We placed small ibotenic acid lesions in the VLPO region
and recorded both sleep and body temperature continuously for periods
of 1-3 weeks. We further used Fos immunocytochemistry to correlate
these responses with the number of remaining sleep-positive neurons in
the VLPO central cluster and the extended VLPO. This histological
marker allowed us to correlate precisely the anatomical location of the
lesions with their effects on sleep.
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MATERIALS AND METHODS |
Animals, surgery, and recording methods
Animals
Pathogen-free adult male Sprague Dawley rats (250-275 gm;
n = 82) purchased from Taconic (Germantown, NY)
were housed individually and given access to food and water ad
libitum. All animals were housed under controlled
conditions (12 hr of light starting at 07:00) in an isolated
ventilated chamber maintained at 20-22°C. All protocols were
approved by the Institutional Animal Care and Use Committees of Beth
Israel Deaconess Medical Center and Harvard Medical School.
Electroencephalogram/electromyogram implantation, sleep
recording, and scoring
The rats were anesthetized by intraperitoneal chloral hydrate
(7% in saline; 350 mg/kg), prepared for aseptic surgery, and secured
in a stereotaxic frame. Four electroencephalogram (EEG) electrodes were
screwed onto the skull (two on the left and two on the right), two
electromyogram (EMG) electrodes were placed under the nuchal muscles,
and all leads were connected to a pedestal socket. Dental cement was
then used to affix the EEG/EMG electrodes to the skull. A small area
(0.50 cm) around the bregma was left without dental cement and filled
with bone wax that was removable.
After a 6 d recovery period, animals were adapted to the EEG/EMG
recording apparatus for 24 hr before recordings began. The EEG/EMG
signals were amplified by a polygraph (Grass) and digitized by an
ICELUS (G System). Wake-sleep states were manually scored, by an
observer who was not aware of the histological results of the animals,
in 12 sec epochs based on the digitized EEG/EMG of each rat.
Wakefulness was identified by the presence of desynchronized-EEG and
high-EMG activity. Nonrapid-eye-movement (NREM) sleep was identified by
the presence of a high-amplitude, slow-wave EEG and low-EMG activity
relative to that of waking. Rapid-eye-movement (REM) sleep was
identified by the presence of regular theta activity on EEG, coupled
with low-EMG activity relative to that of NREM sleep. When two states
(for example, NREM sleep and wake) occurred within a 12 sec epoch, the
epoch was scored for the state that predominated.
Ibotenic acid injection
Animals were anesthetized with chloral hydrate, bone wax was
removed, the skull was reexposed, and a fine glass micropipette (10-20
µm tip diameter) was lowered into the VLPO area on each side of the
brain stereotaxically. The coordinates used for the VLPO (Paxinos and
Watson, 1986 ) were anteroposterior, 0.6 mm; dorsoventral,
8.5 mm; and mediolateral, ±1.0 mm with reference to the bregma, with
the tooth bar at 3.3 mm. The coordinates for medial preoptic control
injections were anteroposterior, 0.4 mm; dorsoventral, 8.0 mm; and
mediolateral, ±0.4 mm; and the coordinates for ventromedial preoptic
injections were anteroposterior, 0.2 mm; dorsoventral, 8.2 mm; and
mediolateral, ±0.2 mm. Fifteen nanoliters of ibotenic acid solution
(10 nmol; Sigma) were injected by air pressure through the pipette. The
actual injection volume was measured by displacement of the solution
meniscus within a micropipette of known internal diameter, as
visualized with an operating microscope fitted with an eyepiece
micrometer (see also Scammell et al., 1998 ). After 2 min, the pipette
was slowly withdrawn. The wound was treated with teramycin ointment,
filled with sterile bone wax (Ethicon), and closed with wound clips.
Perfusion, tissue sectioning, and staining
Perfusion and tissue sectioning
To identify sleep-positive neurons in the VLPO, we deeply
anesthetized the rats with chloral hydrate between 10:00 and 12:00 noon
when they had been behaviorally asleep for most of the previous hour
and perfused the animals with saline (100 ml) followed by 10% formalin
(300 ml) transcardially. The brains were cut in the coronal plane on a
freezing microtome into four evenly spaced series of 40 µm sections.
Immunohistochemistry
Sections were washed in PBS (three changes) and incubated in PBS
containing 0.3% Triton X-100 and goat serum (PGT) for 1 hr at room
temperature, followed by the primary antiserum (Fos, Ab-5 rabbit
polyclonal serum; 1:150,000; Oncogene) in the same diluent for 2 d
at room temperature. Sections were then washed in PBS and incubated in
biotinylated secondary goat anti-rabbit IgG antiserum (1:1000) in PGT
for 1 hr and washed in PBS and incubated in ABC reagents (1:500; Vector
Laboratories, Burlingame, CA) for 1 hr. Sections were then washed again
and incubated in a solution of 0.06% 3,3-diaminobenzidine
tetrahydrochloride (DAB; Sigma), 0.005% cobalt chloride, and 0.001%
nickel ammonium sulfate in PBS plus 0.012%
H2O2 for 10 min. Finally,
the sections were mounted on glass slides, dehydrated in graded
alcohols, cleared in xylene (10 min; twice), and coverslipped.
Nissl staining
An alternate series of sections adjacent to those that were
Fos-stained was mounted on gelatin-coated slides, washed in
H2O, and washed in PBS. Sections were then
incubated in 0.25% thionin in 0.1 M acetate buffer
solution for 2 min, differentiated in graded ethanols, and cleared in
xylene before being coverslipped.
Recording of sleep and temperature physiology
Experiment 1: measurement of short-term effects (4-6 d) of
bilateral VLPO lesions on sleep
The prelesion control EEG/EMG of the rats was continuously
recorded for 24 hr (13:00-13:00) 6 d after the EEG/EMG
implantation. The rats then received bilateral injections of ibotenic
acid targeted at the VLPO (n = 48) or the medial
preoptic area (n = 8). Four to 6 d later, the
EEM/EMG was continuously recorded again for 24 hr (13:00-13:00). Rats
were then perfused on day 7 after lesion placement, as described above.
Experiment 2: measurement of long-term effects (1-3 weeks) of
bilateral VLPO lesions on sleep and body temperature
The preoptic area, including the ventromedial preoptic region
just medial to the VLPO, contains thermosensitive neurons that are
responsible for temperature regulation. To determine whether lesions of
thermoregulatory neurons medial to the VLPO might contribute to sleep
alterations or conversely whether VLPO lesions affected sleep behavior
by altering thermoregulation, 26 additional rats were implanted
for EEG/EMG recording as well as receiving intraperitoneal temperature
telemetry transmitters (VM-FH; Mini-Mitter, Sunriver, OR). Injections
of 15 nl of ibotenic acid (10 nmol) were made into the VLPO region in
15 animals at the time of the initial surgery. As controls, 5 animals
received injections of ibotenic acid into the ventromedial preoptic
region, and 6 rats received 15 nl injections of saline into the VLPO.
To determine whether the changes in sleep behavior and regulation of
body temperature were long-lasting, EEG/EMG and body temperature were
recorded for 24 hr (from 13:00 to 13:00) at the end of the first,
second, and third weeks after VLPO lesions. The rats were later
perfused between 10:00 and 12:00 noon as described above, and their
brain sections were examined for Fos and Nissl staining.
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Determination of involvement of VLPO neurons by lesions |
All cell counts were done before analyzing the physiological
data so that observers were blinded to the behavioral responses.
Fos-IR neurons
Fos-IR neurons in the VLPO cell cluster were quantified as
described in Sherin et al. (1996) . We counted all neurons with deeply
black-stained nuclei that were within a counting box containing the
VLPO cluster, an area that was framed by the lateral edge of the optic
chiasm and extended 300 µm dorsally and 500 µm laterally in three
coronal sections (spaced 160 µm apart). In our previous studies
(Sherin et al., 1996 , 1998 ), we found that the numbers of Fos-IR
neurons in this box are linearly related to sleep behavior. Most of the
Fos-IR neurons within this box in sleeping animals were located within
the pyramidal-shaped VLPO cluster. However, we found that smaller
numbers of Fos-IR neurons after sleep were also located in the region
dorsal and medial to the counting box and VLPO cluster. Because some
neurons in this region contain galanin and glutamic acid decarboxylase
immunoreactivity and project to the histaminergic tuberomammillary
nucleus, we had hypothesized previously that they belong to the VLPO
nucleus but represent a dorsal and a medial extension (Sherin et al.,
1998 ). To test quantitatively the relationship of this Fos expression
and sleep responses in our animals, we constructed a box 300 µm in
dorsoventral height that extended 400 µm medially from the VLPO
counting box to quantify the neurons in the medial-extended VLPO. We
similarly constructed a counting box just dorsal to the first two,
centered on the border between the VLPO and medial-extended VLPO and
200 µm in width and 300 µm in height, to delineate the
dorsal-extended VLPO. We used the same sections in which we counted
cells in the VLPO cluster to count the cells in the dorsal- and
medial-extended VLPO.
We measured the size of nuclei in VLPO neurons in control rats, in
animals with partial lesions (<80% bilateral), and in animals with
80-90% lesions bilaterally. We found no differences of the sizes of
Fos-positive nuclei between these groups. Thus, it was not necessary to
use a correction formula to compare cell counts between groups. Because
the Fos antibodies do not penetrate tissue evenly, we did not use
stereological counting methods.
Nissl staining
The VLPO cluster is recognizable in normal brains as a dense
cellular aggregation whose neurons are slightly larger and more darkly
stained than those in the adjacent preoptic region but smaller and less
darkly stained than those in supraoptic neurons. However, in lesioned
animals these distinctions can be difficult. Furthermore, the VLPO is
surrounded by other Nissl-stained cell groups, so that it is
impractical to use a large rectangular counting box, as we did in the
Fos studies to define the VLPO. We therefore counted all Nissl-stained
neuronal nuclei within an isosceles triangular area with its base 200 µm in width running along the base of the brain starting at the
lateral edge of the supraoptic nucleus and its apex 250 µm
dorsal to the center of the base. This triangle was very close in size,
shape, and location to the VLPO cluster, and this procedure avoided
making subjective counts of which neurons were within the VLPO after
the lesions. Interestingly, neurons within the VLPO triangle tended to
be resistant to ibotenic acid, so that this structure often stood out
as intact when neurons in the regions surrounding the VLPO were
destroyed. This property was very useful in allowing us to isolate the
quantitative relationship between the loss of VLPO cluster neurons and
sleep behavior. However, neurons of the dorsal- and medial-extended
VLPO were too diffuse to be recognized in Nissl-stained sections.
Because neuronal nuclei in the VLPO cluster were not different in size
after lesions, we did not use a correction factor to compare the
different groups. We could not use stereological methods because the
lesion damage made it difficult to define the reference space accurately.
Determination of the lesion area
We used the area of neuronal loss and gliosis demonstrated on
Nissl staining to determine the lesion region. Lesions were plotted
using a camera lucida device (Fig.
1).

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Figure 1.
Camera lucida drawings illustrating the typical
lesions of the VLPO cluster of 80-90% (A) and
50-80% (B) and control lesions in the medial
preoptic area and dorsolateral preoptic area with <50% cell loss in
the VLPO cell cluster (C), as assessed in
Nissl-stained sections. A, The lesion areas in the
animals that had 80-90% loss of the cells in the VLPO cluster ranged
from 400 to 800 µm in diameter and included the entire extent of the
VLPO. B, Because the cells in the VLPO cluster were
relatively resistant to ibotenic acid compared with the cells in the
surrounding regions, even when the ibotenic acid injection was placed
close to the base of the hypothalamus, substantial numbers of cells in
the VLPO cluster often survived (50-80% cell loss). C,
Similarly when the lesion sites were placed just dorsal to the VLPO
cluster, the areas around the VLPO were often devastated, but the
majority of cells in the VLPO cluster survived. OC,
Optic chiasm.
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Analysis of the relationship between loss of the VLPO cluster and
extended VLPO neurons and effects on sleep and body temperature |
To assess the short-term effects of VLPO lesions on sleep, we
used a total of 56 rats. In eight cases, the lesion was aimed at the
medial preoptic nucleus as controls. The remaining 48 animals, in which
the VLPO was targeted, were divided into three groups, based on
examination of the histology. In group I, the VLPO cluster was intact
(<50% cell loss on each side of the brain, as assessed in
Nissl-stained sections; n = 9); in group II, a
unilateral lesion of the VLPO cluster was present (>50% cell loss on
one side; n = 10); and in group III, bilateral lesions
of the VLPO cluster were documented (>50% cell loss bilaterally;
n = 29). We further subdivided group III into a set of
seven rats with nearly complete bilateral lesions of the VLPO cluster
(>80% cell loss on each side). For a variety of technical reasons,
eight animals could not be evaluated adequately and were dropped from
further analysis.
Effect of VLPO lesions on sleep architecture
We plotted the percentage of NREM sleep per hour and the
percentage of REM sleep per hour for 24 hr, both before and 4-6 d after lesion placement, for the seven animals in group III with >80% cell loss in the VLPO cluster bilaterally. We used an ANOVA and
the nonparametric Mann-Whitney test to determine significant differences in the paired data.
The relationship between Fos-IR neurons in the VLPO and sleep
To determine the effect of VLPO lesions specifically on sleep
behavior, we correlated numbers of Fos-IR neurons in the VLPO cluster
and the extended VLPO with EEG delta power, NREM sleep time, and REM
sleep time. Our preliminary experiments showed that unilateral VLPO
lesions did not affect total sleep time. Thus, we only used data from
rats with bilateral lesions (>50% neuron loss bilaterally). The
number of Fos-IR neurons and Nissl-stained neurons are represented as
the mean number of cells per section (on one side of the brain).
The relationship of the number of sleep-positive neurons in the
VLPO cluster and extended VLPO and delta power in the 24 hr EEG.
Delta power (0.5-4.0 Hz) occurs mainly during stage 3-4 NREM sleep;
thus, the amount of delta power in the EEG can be used as a measure of
the amount of deep sleep. We used the ICELUS program to calculate
the delta power summed over 24 hr and to compare the change between
the baseline EEG versus the EEG 6 d after lesion placement.
The delta power change was then plotted against the number of
sleep-positive (Fos-IR) neurons in the VLPO cluster or extended VLPO of
each animal, and the correlation coefficient across the group was determined.
The relationship between the number of sleep-positive neurons in
the VLPO cluster and extended VLPO and NREM sleep time. We plotted
the number of Fos-IR neurons in the VLPO cluster and the extended VLPO
against the percentage change in the duration of NREM sleep and
calculated the correlation coefficient.
The relationship between the number of Fos-IR neurons in the VLPO
cluster and extended VLPO and REM sleep time. We compared the
number of Fos-IR cells in the VLPO cluster and the extended VLPO
against the percentage reduction of REM sleep in all animals by
calculating the correlation coefficient.
To determine the long-term effects of VLPO lesions, we used
a total of 26 animals. We divided these into a group of 15 animals with
>50% bilateral lesions of the VLPO cluster, a group of 6 animals with
>50% bilateral ventromedial preoptic lesions, and 5 control rats with
saline injections. The group with VLPO lesions was further subdivided
into 4 rats with severe (70-90%) neuron loss bilaterally in the VLPO
cluster and 11 with less severe lesions. To determine sleep alteration,
we compared NREM sleep of the rats with severe bilateral VLPO cluster
lesions with that of control rats that had received sham (saline)
injection. For linear regression analysis we plotted NREM sleep time
against the loss of neurons in the VLPO cluster for the full group of
rats with VLPO lesions of different degrees on both sides of the brain
(n = 15) as well as for the rats with control
injections (n = 5). Because we did not measure
prelesion EEG in this group, delta power (which varies substantially
between animals in part as a function of electrode placement and
therefore can only be examined in paired data from the same animal)
could not be used for comparison.
To determine alterations of body temperature, the mean body
temperature across 24 hr and the range of circadian variation in body
temperature were calculated for each animal, and the mean for the
controls was compared with that of the four animals with the most
severe lesions of the VLPO cluster and the five animals with
ventromedial preoptic lesions by using a t test. In
addition, the mean body temperature summated for each hour of the day
was calculated for each group, and comparisons were made across groups by an ANOVA followed by t tests. Finally, the variance of
the body temperature was calculated for each animal, and the mean in each experimental group was calculated and compared with the controls by a t test.
The relationship between the number of Fos-IR neurons and the
number of neurons revealed by Nissl staining in the VLPO
cluster
To determine whether the reduction in the number of Fos-IR
neurons in the VLPO cluster after sleep accurately reflected cell loss
in this structure, we calculated the correlation coefficient between
these two measures.
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RESULTS |
Experiment 1: short-term effects of bilateral lesions of the VLPO
cluster and extended VLPO on sleep
We attempted to destroy VLPO neurons while minimizing the damage
to adjacent areas by using injection of 10 nmol of ibotenic acid into
the VLPO region (Figs. 1, 2C).
Although the lesions that resulted were small (diameter, ~400-800
µm), all extended beyond the VLPO cluster to involve adjacent areas
to varying degrees. Furthermore, in most cases with lesions
successfully centered in the VLPO cluster, ~10-20% of neurons in
the VLPO cluster were still intact as determined by Nissl staining
(Fig. 2C) and c-fos immunostaining (Fig.
2D). Hence, we used statistical analysis to compare
the extent of injury to the VLPO cluster and extended VLPO with changes
in sleep behavior. To control for damage extending beyond the VLPO
cluster, we examined the sleep behavior of rats in which the lesions
were mainly placed dorsal or medial to the VLPO cluster, involving the
dorsal- or medial-extended VLPO, but with only unilateral or <50%
bilateral cell loss in the VLPO cluster (Fig.
2F-I). As expected, there was a strong linear
correlation (r = 0.87; n = 29;
p < 0.001; Fig.
3D) between the number of the Fos-positive neurons in the VLPO cluster at the height of the sleep
period and the total number of surviving VLPO neurons (as determined by
Nissl staining). Hence, most results were calculated as comparisons of
behavior against loss of Fos-IR neurons.

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Figure 2.
A series of photomicrographs illustrating lesions
of the VLPO (A-D) and control lesions
(E-I) by ibotenic acid injection.
A, The VLPO cluster is visualized by Nissl staining as a
pyramidal-shaped cell cluster along the base of the brain, just lateral
to the optic chiasm. The triangular
counting box used to quantify neurons in
the VLPO cluster in Nissl preparations is shown. B, The
VLPO cluster stands out as an aggregation of c-fos-immunoreactive
neurons after sleep. The boxes in B
represent those used to count cells in the VLPO cluster and the medial
(m)- and dorsal
(d)-extended VLPO. C, D, After
bilateral ibotenic acid lesions, it is possible to quantify the
remaining neurons in the VLPO cluster by Nissl staining
(C; dashed lines represent borders of
lesions) or by Fos immunostaining (D; the
arrowheads indicate Fos-positive cells in the VLPO
cluster) in animals that are perfused during the height of the sleep
cycle, between 10:00 and 12:00 noon. E-I, A lesion of
the ventromedial preoptic area (VMPO; E)
did little if any damage to the VLPO, and lesions dorsal to the VLPO
(F) or larger lesions in the medial preoptic area
(H) left the VLPO cluster nearly intact,
as shown by higher magnification views of the areas
included in the boxes (G,
I, respectively).
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Figure 3.
Correlation of the loss of NREM sleep and delta
power with the loss of VLPO neurons. A, The relationship
of the loss of Fos-IR neurons in the VLPO cluster and the percentage
reduction of NREM sleep is shown. The NREM sleep reduction was
calculated by the percentage change in 24 hr NREM sleep time from
before to after the lesion. The number of Fos-IR neurons in the VLPO cluster was
measured in rats that were perfused while sleeping between 10:00 and
12:00 noon (r = 0.77; p < 0.001). B, The relatively weak correlation
(r = 0.48) of the loss of Fos-IR neurons in the
extended VLPO and the percentage reduction of NREM sleep did not reach
statistical significance. C, The relationship between
the loss of Fos-IR neurons in the VLPO and the percentage reduction of
the delta power calculated from comparing the 24 hr prelesion and
postlesion EEG (r = 0.79; p < 0.001) is shown. D, The number of Nissl-stained
neurons in the VLPO cluster correlates closely with the number of
Fos-IR neurons in the nucleus during morning sleep
(r = 0.87; p < 0.001).
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Loss of NREM sleep time and EEG delta power in animals with lesions
of the VLPO cluster and extended VLPO
Previous work in our laboratory showed that c-fos expression in
the VLPO cluster was positively correlated with sleep during the hour
before death (Sherin et al., 1996 ). We hypothesized that the remaining
NREM sleep after VLPO lesions would correlate with the number of
surviving neurons in the VLPO cluster that express c-fos at the peak of
the sleep cycle. Regression analysis across the entire series of
animals with VLPO lesions showed a strong correlation
(r = 0.77; n = 29; p < 0.001) between the reduction of Fos-IR neurons in the VLPO cluster and
the percentage of the reduction in NREM sleep per 24 hr (Fig.
3A). Similarly, there was a strong linear relationship
between the reduction in the number of Fos-IR neurons in the VLPO
cluster and the reduction of delta power in the EEG recording across 24 hr (r = 0.79; n = 29; p < 0.001; Fig. 3C).
The pronounced effect of successful bilateral lesions (>80% cell
loss) of the VLPO cluster on sleep was apparent in individual rats
(Fig. 4A) as well as in
grouped data (n = 7; Fig. 4B).
Reductions were seen in both total sleep time (56.4 ± 7.1%,
mean ± SEM; p < 0.01) and NREM sleep time
(54.3 ± 4.3%; p < 0.01) after VLPO cluster
lesions. The duration of individual sleep bouts during 6 hr in the
light cycle (7:00-13:00) was reduced from 5.87 ± 0.66 to
2.28 ± 0.19 min (p < 0.01), but the
number of bouts was actually increased from 38.3 ± 3.9 to
51.5 ± 4.0 (p < 0.05), suggesting that
animals with lesions of the VLPO cluster still had strong sleep drive
(sleepiness) but could not maintain the sleep state. In addition, there
was also a 57.8 ± 7.4% (p < 0.002;
F = 11.63) reduction of delta power in postlesion
compared with prelesion measurements in the same group of animals,
indicating that the loss of NREM sleep time was not compensated by an
increased quality (delta power) of the remaining sleep (Figs.
3C, 4A). It appeared that the reduction in
NREM sleep was independent of circadian time (Fig. 4) and that the
circadian rhythm of the remaining NREM sleep was not affected by the
bilateral VLPO lesions (Fig. 4).

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Figure 4.
The effect of severe bilateral (>80%) lesions of
the VLPO cluster on delta power and NREM sleep. A,
Comparison of delta power in the EEG plotted over 24 hr for a single
animal with >90% cell loss in the VLPO cluster bilaterally (R1352)
before lesion (gray) and 6 d after lesion
(black) is shown. The black
bar along the bottom of
the graph indicates the dark cycle. Note the nearly
complete loss of periods of greatest delta activity during the first
part of the sleep cycle (just after lights on) and during the brief
episodes of sleep during the dark cycle. B, For the
entire group of seven rats with severe bilateral VLPO lesions, there
was loss of nearly 55% of NREM sleep time. In particular, NREM sleep
bouts during the dark cycle were almost entirely eliminated. However,
circadian variation in NREM sleep time persisted.
*p < 0.05; **p < 0.01.
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Because all of these lesions also affected the dorsal and medial
extensions of the VLPO to varying degrees, the numbers of Fos-IR
neurons in the extended VLPO were also compared with the NREM sleep
time in the group of animals with extensive lesions of the VLPO cluster
(Fig. 3B). There was no significant correlation (r = 0.48; p > 0.05). In a further
analysis, we examined the sleep in a group of animals with lesions of
the dorsal-extended VLPO but not the VLPO cluster (n = 5; taken from 9 rats in group I with lesions dorsal to the VLPO cluster
in which there was <50% cell loss in the VLPO cluster). In this group
of animals, there was only a 14.6 ± 9.6% reduction in NREM sleep
time (p > 0.05), although delta power across
the 24 hr EEG was decreased by almost 28.6 ± 5.6%
(p < 0.05). In a separate group of rats with
lesions involving the medial extension of the VLPO but not the VLPO
cluster (drawn from the group with ibotenic acid injections aimed at
the medial preoptic area; n = 5), there was a 24.5 ± 4.9% (p < 0.01) reduction in NREM sleep
time (Fig. 5A) but only an
8.8 ± 1.3% (p > 0.05) decrease in delta
power in the 24 hr EEG. The reduction of NREM sleep time in the rats
with medial preoptic lesions occurred mostly during the light period
when they typically experience most of their NREM
sleep.

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Figure 5.
Comparison of NREM and REM sleep before and after
lesion of the medial preoptic area. The lesion caused a reduction in
NREM sleep by 24.5% (A) and in REM sleep by 30%
(not statistically significant; B). Loss of NREM
sleep was predominantly late in the light cycle, whereas the reduction
of REM sleep also involved loss of peaks during the dark cycle.
*p < 0.05.
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Loss of REM sleep with lesions of the VLPO cluster and the
extended VLPO
REM sleep was also decreased by 58.5 ± 8.8%
(p < 0.05) in animals with >80% bilateral
lesions of the VLPO cluster (Fig.
6A; n = 7). In particular, the REM peaks during the animal's normal waking
time (i.e., during the night) were nearly abolished. However, the
decrease in REM sleep could not be attributed to injury to the VLPO
cluster, because the correlation between the number of Fos-IR neurons
in the VLPO cluster and REM sleep time was not statistically
significant (r = 0.35; p > 0.1; Fig.
6B). However, in all of these cases there was also
extensive loss of neurons in the area surrounding the VLPO cluster,
including the dorsal- and medial-extended VLPO.

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Figure 6.
Loss of REM sleep correlates with loss of Fos-IR
neurons in the extended VLPO but not in the VLPO cluster.
A, There was a substantial (~50%) loss of REM sleep
in the comparison of the prelesion and postlesion behavior of the seven
rats with 80-90% loss of neurons in the VLPO cluster
(*p < 0.05; **p < 0.01). REM
sleep episodes during the night were almost entirely eliminated.
B, However, the numbers of surviving Fos-IR neurons in
the VLPO cluster after sleep did not correlate well with REM sleep behavior (r = 0.35; n = 29; p > 0.05).
C, In contrast, the number of Fos-positive cells in the
extended VLPO (in which cell loss was equally substantial in this
series) was significantly correlated with the percentage reduction of
REM sleep (r = 0.74; p < 0.01;
n = 29).
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In agreement with these areas being responsible for the loss of REM
sleep, rats with lesions solely dorsal to the VLPO cluster, in the
dorsal-extended VLPO, showed reductions in REM sleep that averaged
twice the reductions in NREM sleep, or 35.4 ± 4.5%
(n = 5; p < 0.005). Rats with
bilateral lesions of the medial preoptic area, involving the medial
extension of the VLPO but not the VLPO cluster, showed a reduction in
REM sleep (30.9 ± 19.5%) similar to the degree of NREM
reduction, but this was not statistically significant
(n = 5; p > 0.05). It appeared that
the reduction in REM sleep time predominantly occurred during the
light period (Fig. 5B). Counts of Fos-IR neurons within the
medial- and dorsal-extended VLPO showed a statistically significant
correlation (r = 0.74; p < 0.01;
n = 29) with the reduction in REM sleep time (Fig.
6C).
Experiment 2: long-term effects of bilateral preoptic lesions on
sleep and body temperature
Because the medial preoptic area adjacent to the VLPO plays an
important role in thermoregulation (for review, see Satinoff, 1978 ), we
prepared a second group of animals in which we monitored body
temperature as well as sleep behavior after preoptic lesions. In
addition, we explored the persistence of the changes in sleep and body
temperature after preoptic lesions for 3 weeks in a group of 15 additional rats with ibotenic lesions directed at the VLPO, a group of
5 rats with lesions directed at the ventromedial preoptic nucleus, and a group of 6 control rats that received injections of
saline into the VLPO region. Within the group with VLPO lesions, Nissl
and c-fos staining disclosed that 4 of the 15 rats had 70-90% bilateral cell loss in the VLPO cluster, 3 had 60-70% bilateral cell
loss in the VLPO cluster, 3 had 70-90% unilateral cell loss in the
VLPO cluster, 2 had lesions ranging from 30 to 60% of the VLPO cluster
neurons, and 3 had no lesion of the VLPO cluster. The small numbers of
animals in each group precluded the analysis of damage to the extended
VLPO in this series. In the five rats with lesions of the
ventromedial preoptic area (Fig. 2E), the lesions
were deliberately placed more ventrally and medially than were the
medial preoptic lesions in the short-term study to avoid damage to
neurons in the medial-extended VLPO (see above).
Effects of lesions of the VLPO cluster
At the end of 3 weeks after the placement of lesions involving the
VLPO cluster, animals appeared healthy and behaved normally. Although
specific tests of cognitive or neuroendocrine function were not
attempted, the brains showed the same patterns of Fos immunoreactivity
as did brains of animals in the acute experiments. NREM sleep was
decreased in animals with 70-90% lesions of the VLPO cluster
bilaterally compared with that of saline-injected controls during each
of the 3 weeks after lesion placement [first week, reduction by
44.8 ± 12.5% (p < 0.05); second week,
reduction by 62.7 ± 11.5% (p < 0.01);
third week, reduction by 56.7 ± 12.3% (p < 0.01)]. Similarly, REM sleep was reduced by 62.2 ± 18.3% (p < 0.01) in the first week, 68.7 ± 15.7% (p < 0.01) in the second week, and
74.5 ± 8.1% (p < 0.01) in the third
week. Although, the decrease in NREM sleep actually was more severe in
weeks 2 and 3 than in the first week after lesion placement, NREM sleep during weeks 2 and 3 did not differ statistically (Fig.
7A).

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Figure 7.
Change in NREM sleep time over a 3 week period
after lesions of the VLPO (A) and
VMPO (B). A,
In four animals with 70-90% bilateral lesions of the VLPO cluster,
the percentage of NREM sleep time was depressed by almost 45% in the
first week, 63% in the second week, and 57% in the third week
compared with that of a group of control rats that had received
bilateral saline injections. As in the short-term experiments, the
animals with VLPO lesions showed almost complete loss of NREM sleep
during the dark cycle and substantial loss at the onset of the light
cycle (*p < 0.05). There was no trend toward
recovery. B, In five animals with severe bilateral
lesions of the ventromedial preoptic nucleus, there was no change in
NREM sleep time compared with that of saline-injected control
animals.
|
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There was a strong linear correlation between the NREM sleep reduction
across the entire group and the number of Fos-IR neurons in the VLPO
cluster (r = 0.75; n = 21;
F = 22.77; p < 0.05; Fig. 8A) but not in the
extended VLPO (r = 0.51; p > 0.05;
Fig. 8B). However, the loss of REM sleep correlated
with the reduction in the numbers of neurons in the extended VLPO
(r = 0.67; p < 0.05; Fig.
8D) but not in the VLPO cluster (r = 0.37; p > 0.05; Fig. 8C). In this
experiment, EEG/EMG recordings were not monitored before ibotenic acid
administration. Therefore we could not analyze delta power (the
amplitude of which is highly variable between subjects and hence must
be examined in paired prelesion and postlesion data for individual
animals).

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Figure 8.
Correlation of loss of NREM or REM sleep time with
the numbers of Fos-IR neurons in the VLPO and extended VLPO 3 weeks
after placement of severe bilateral lesions (70-90% cell loss in the
VLPO cluster). A, B, The decrease in NREM sleep
correlated closely with the loss of Fos-IR neurons in the VLPO cluster
(A; r = 0.75; p < 0.05) but not with the loss of Fos-IR neurons in the extended VLPO
(B; r = 0.51; p > 0.05). C, D, On the other hand, the decrease in REM
sleep did not correlate with the loss of Fos-IR neurons in the VLPO
cluster (C; r = 0.37;
p > 0.05) but did correlate with the loss of
Fos-IR neurons in the extended VLPO (D;
r = 0.67; p < 0.05).
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Although the rats (n = 4) with 70-90% VLPO lesions
had a slightly larger amplitude in the range of body temperature
(1.01 ± 0.07°C; Fig.
9A) than did the
saline-injected controls (n = 5; 0.91 ± 0.07°C;
Fig. 9B), the difference was not statistically significant
(p = 0.133). The mean body temperature showed no
significant difference between the two groups (lesion group, 37.3 ± 0.1°C; control group, 37.63 ± 0.07°C; p = 0.11).

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Figure 9.
Effect of lesions of the VLPO or ventromedial
preoptic nucleus on body temperature recorded over 24 hr at three
weekly intervals. A, B, Severe bilateral lesions of the
VLPO in four rats had no effect on the mean body temperature or its
daily circadian rhythm (A) when compared with
that of four control rats (B). Although the
animals with VLPO lesions had a slightly greater circadian excursion of
body temperature, this did not differ statistically from that of the
saline-injected control animals. C, In contrast, in four
animals with lesions of the ventromedial preoptic nucleus, the
circadian rhythm of body temperature was unaffected, but the range was
~2°C during the course of the day (approximately twice normal), and
the peaks and troughs of body temperature both differed significantly
from that of control animals (p < 0.05).
Body temperature showed substantial instability in these animals, as
evidenced by the significantly larger variance compared with that of
the control or VLPO-lesioned animals (p < 0.05).
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Lesions of the ventromedial preoptic nucleus
By contrast with the larger medial preoptic lesions in the
short-term group, which included the medial-extended VLPO, the ventromedial preoptic lesions caused no change in sleep behavior (total
sleep time or circadian rhythm of sleep) (Fig. 7B). However, these animals demonstrated substantial disruption in the ability to
regulate body temperature within a narrow range (Fig. 9C). The amplitude of the range of body temperature was ~1.80 ± 0.20°C, which was almost double that of control animals (0.91 ± 0.07°C). Although the rats with the ventromedial preoptic lesions
showed a normal circadian rhythm of body temperature, the mean body
temperature was significantly greater than that of controls during the
dark period (38.2 ± 0.1 vs 37.7 ± 0.2°C;
p < 0.05) and significantly lower than that of
controls during the light period (36.9 ± 0.2 vs 37.3 ± 0.1°C; p < 0.05), consistent with a wider amplitude of body temperature cycling. In addition, the rats with ventromedial preoptic lesions showed a significant increase in the variance of body
temperature compared with that of VLPO-lesioned animals (variance for
body temperature in animals with ventromedial preoptic lesions was
6.7 ± 0.12.; variance for the animals with VLPO lesions was
1.10 ± 0.05; p < 0.001 by t test). We
characterize this combination of deficits as a loss of fine tuning of
body temperature, similar to the description of Satinoff (1978) in
animals with somewhat larger medial preoptic lesions.
 |
DISCUSSION |
Our observations identify a triple dissociation of three different
populations of preoptic neurons with principal effects on REM sleep,
NREM sleep, and thermoregulation. After bilateral lesions of the VLPO
cell cluster, we found a linear correlation between the reduction in
the number of sleep-positive cells in the VLPO cluster and reductions
in NREM sleep and delta power but not REM sleep. In this group of
animals, nearly complete bilateral lesions of the VLPO cell cluster
(80-90% cell loss) dramatically reduced NREM sleep by >50% and
delta power in the 24 hr EEG by nearly 60%. Insomnia caused by lesions
of the VLPO cell cluster persisted for at least 3 weeks with no trend
toward recovery and was not associated with changes in body
temperature. Although the animals with VLPO lesions showed substantial
deficits in REM sleep as well, the loss of REM sleep did not correlate
with loss of neurons in the VLPO cluster.
By contrast, animals with lesions just dorsal to but not involving the
VLPO cell cluster showed statistically significant reductions in REM
sleep but not in NREM sleep time. We had argued previously that
galanin-immunoreactive neurons in this region that project to the
tuberomammillary nucleus represent a part of the VLPO (Sherin et al.,
1998 ). In these experiments, we found that loss of Fos-IR,
sleep-positive neurons in the dorsal- and medial-extended VLPO
correlated with loss of REM but not NREM sleep, arguing for a
specialized role for sleep-positive neurons in the extended VLPO in REM
sleep regulation.
Lesions involving the ventromedial preoptic nucleus bilaterally showed
dramatic disruption of the fine tuning of thermoregulation, with a
larger variance and wider circadian swings in body temperature. However, there were no changes in the periodicity of circadian cycling
of body temperature, and the sleep in these animals was normal.
Technical considerations
Method for defining lesions
We used ibotenic acid because it is a cell-specific excitotoxin
that does not destroy fibers of passage. We used the smallest practical
amount of ibotenic acid (15 nl containing 10 nmol of ibotenic acid),
but all of the VLPO lesions included adjacent cell groups to varying
degrees, and in no case was the entire VLPO population eliminated.
Hence, statistical analysis of the extent of VLPO cell loss compared
with physiological results formed a critical component of our analysis.
Method for defining the VLPO and the extended VLPO
The VLPO was originally defined by its unique connections
(projections to the histaminergic tuberomammillary nucleus), chemical makeup (cells both galaninergic and GABAergic), and physiological activity (a high percentage of neurons showing Fos expression after
sleep) (Sherin et al., 1996 , 1998 ). As is the case for many hypothalamic nuclei, these criteria identify a relatively dense cell
cluster as well as a population of adjacent but more scattered neurons
with similar chemical, connectional, and physiological characteristics
(Sherin et al., 1998 ; Gaus and Saper, 1999 ). For the purpose of
counting cells in the pyramidal-shaped VLPO cluster in Nissl
preparations, it is necessary to use a triangular counting box to avoid
counting extraneous neurons. However, in counting Fos-positive VLPO
cells, we use a rectangular counting box, because the vast majority of
Fos-IR neurons in this region during sleep belong to the VLPO cluster.
To capture counts of sleep-positive neurons medial and dorsal to the
VLPO cluster, which we consider to be a part of the cell complex,
additional counting boxes medial and dorsal to the VLPO were
constructed. These counting boxes have the advantage of providing a set
of objective criteria for quantification, and to the extent that they
do not faithfully follow borders between nuclei, they would be expected
to diminish rather than to enhance the positive correlations that we
have found.
Interaction of NREM sleep, REM sleep, and thermoregulation in the
preoptic region
Szymusiak et al. (1991) found that the insomnia caused by lesions
of the preoptic region in cats can be reversed by placing the animals
at a high ambient temperature (33°C). They hypothesized that sleep is
provoked by stimulation of the remaining thermosensitive neurons that
stimulate sleep and recently reported that within the VLPO 28% of
sleep-active neurons are warm sensitive as well (Szymusiak et al.,
1998 ). Thus, the sleep deficits reported in previous studies (Nauta,
1946 ; Sterman and Clemente, 1962a ,b ) might have in part
reflected thermoregulatory deficits.
Our observations indicate that bilateral lesions that destroy from 80 to 90% of neurons in the VLPO cell cluster produce profound insomnia
but do not alter mean body temperature or its range or circadian
pattern over the course of the day. Conversely, lesions in the
ventromedial preoptic nucleus, avoiding the VLPO and medial-extended VLPO, caused loss of the fine tuning of body temperature (increased circadian amplitude and variance of body temperature), without affecting circadian periodicity or sleep. Moreover, these alterations persisted for the entire period of 3 weeks that we studied the animals,
without any trend toward normalization. Hence, lesions of the preoptic
area in previous studies that caused changes in both sleep and body
temperature may have involved both the ventromedial preoptic nucleus
and the VLPO. For example, Sallanon et al. (1989) found that changes in
sleep were not correlated with changes of body temperature, supporting
the idea that different populations of the cells in the preoptic area
are involved in the regulation of body temperature and sleep. Thus,
although neurons involved in sleep and thermal regulation may share
considerable input and interact extensively, the sites that ultimately
regulate these physiological responses are anatomically and
functionally separable.
The dissociation of mechanisms for NREM and REM sleep within the
preoptic area is surprising. Previous work, such as that by Benington
and Heller (1994) , suggested that loss of NREM sleep should result in
the proportional loss of REM sleep. Hence, loss of VLPO neurons would
be expected to disturb both REM and NREM sleep equally. The lack of
correlation of loss of neurons in the VLPO cluster with loss of REM
sleep, coupled with the significant correlation of loss of REM sleep
with loss of sleep-positive neurons in the medial- and dorsal-extended
VLPO, implies that different parts of the VLPO complex may
differentially project to different brainstem targets and hence be
involved in different phases of sleep.
For example, the region including the medial-extended VLPO was found by
Sherin et al. (1998) to project more heavily to the medial part of the
tuberomammillary nucleus. In contrast, the dorsal-extended VLPO seems
to be responsible for most VLPO projections to the dorsal and medial
raphe nuclei (Bjorkum et al., 1999 ). The role of these different
projections in the regulation of sleep remains to be investigated.
However, this hypothesis is consistent with the observation that the
firing of some medial and dorsolateral preoptic neurons is associated
specifically with REM sleep in rats (Koyama and Hayaishi, 1994 ;
Szymusiak et al., 1998 ).
This view would not preclude interaction by REM and NREM sleep but
would suggest that the VLPO is a critical part of the circuitry by
which such interaction would take place.
Conclusions
Although previous studies of the VLPO neurons have correlated
their activity with sleep, evidence of a causal role has been lacking.
Our results indicate that the VLPO cluster is a necessary component of
sleep circuitry, without which NREM sleep is severely impaired.
Furthermore, it is likely that in previous studies showing insomnia
after large preoptic area lesions, the VLPO was the critical structure
responsible for the changes in sleep behavior. To the extent that
lesions of the areas medial and dorsal to the VLPO impair sleep
behavior, this is likely to be caused by damage to VLPO neurons that
are located outside the main cell cluster, invading these adjacent
territories. However, lesions in these regions never produce the
profound deficits of NREM sleep and delta power that are associated
with lesions of the VLPO cell cluster but rather seem more closely
associated with the regulation of REM sleep.
Studies on the long-term effects of sleep deprivation have used models
in which sleep deprivation was achieved by continual behavioral stress.
The fact that our animals failed to show recovery of sleep behavior
even after 3 weeks suggests that VLPO lesions may present a new model
for assessing the long-term effects of sleep deprivation on brain
function. In addition, study of the mechanisms by which at least a
portion of sleep behavior remains in animals with few functional VLPO
cells can be used to understand the alternative pathways by which the
brain can regulate sleep.
 |
FOOTNOTES |
Received July 27, 1999; revised Feb. 8, 2000; accepted Feb. 17, 2000.
This work was supported by United States Public Health Service
Grants HL60292 and MH55772. We thank Quan Hue Ha and Mihn Tuan Ha for
excellent technical work.
Correspondence should be addressed to Dr. C. B. Saper, Department
of Neurology, Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center, 330 Brookline
Avenue, Boston, MA 02215. E-mail: csaper{at}caregroup.harvard.edu.
 |
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