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Decrease in scale invariance of activity fluctuations with aging and in patients with suprasellar tumors
Authors:S D Joustra  C Gu  J H T Rohling  L Pickering  M Klose  K Hu
Institution:1. Center for Endocrine Tumors Leiden, Department of Medicine, Division of Endocrinology, Leiden University Medical Center, Leiden, The Netherlands;2. Department of Molecular Cell Biology, Laboratory for Neurophysiology, Leiden University Medical Center, Leiden, The Netherlands;3. Business School, University of Shanghai for Science and Technology, Shanghai, China;4. Department of Medical Endocrinology, Rigshospitalet, Copenhagen University Hospital, Copenhagen, Denmark;5. Danish Center for Sleep Medicine, Neurophysiologic Clinic, Rigshospitalet, Copenhagen University Hospital, Copenhagen, Denmark;6. Division of Sleep and Circadian Disorders, Brigham and Women’s Hospital, Boston, MA, USA;7. Division of Sleep Medicine, Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA, USA
Abstract:Motor activity in healthy young humans displays intrinsic fluctuations that are scale-invariant over a wide range of time scales (from minutes to hours). Human postmortem and animal lesion studies showed that the intact function of the suprachiasmatic nucleus (SCN) is required to maintain such scale-invariant patterns. We therefore hypothesized that scale invariance is degraded in patients treated for suprasellar tumors that compress the SCN. To test the hypothesis, we investigated 68 patients with nonfunctioning pituitary macroadenoma and 22 patients with craniopharyngioma, as well as 72 age-matched healthy controls (age range 21.0–70.6 years). Spontaneous wrist locomotor activity was measured for 7 days with actigraphy, and detrended fluctuation analysis was applied to assess correlations over a range of time scales from minutes to 24 h. For all the subjects, complex scale-invariant correlations were only present for time scales smaller than 1.5 h, and became more random at time scales 1.5–10 h. Patients with suprasellar tumors showed a larger decrease in correlations at 1.5–10 h as compared to healthy controls. Within healthy subject, gender and age >33 year were associated with attenuated scale invariance. Conversely, activity patterns at time scales between 10 and 24 h were significantly more regular than all other time scales, and this was mostly associated with age.

In conclusion, scale invariance is degraded in healthy subjects at the ages of >33 year as characterized by attenuation of correlations at time scales 1.5–10 h. In addition, scale invariance was more degraded in patients with suprasellar tumors as compared to healthy subjects.

Keywords:Circadian rhythmicity  craniopharyngioma  detrended fluctuation analysis  nonfunctioning pituitary macroadenoma  scale invariance  suprachiasmatic nucleus
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