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Why
Antihistamines Put You to Sleep
THURSDAY,
May 27 (HealthDayNews) -- Brain cells that contain the chemical
histamine are critical for waking, says a study by scientists
at the Veterans Affairs' Neurobiology Research Laboratory
and University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA) Neuropsychiatric
Institute.
The study,
which utilized dogs with the sleep disorder narcolepsy, found
that cessation of activity in brain cells with histamine causes
loss of consciousness during sleep. The findings may explain
why antihistamine drugs cause drowsiness.
The researchers
also found that cessation of activity in brain cells that
contain the chemicals norepinephrine or serotonin causes loss
of muscle tone during sleep.
The study
appears in the May 27 issue of Neuron.
"Our
findings greatly improve our understanding of the brain activity
responsible for maintaining consciousness and muscle tone
while awake," senior author Dr. Jerome Siegel, chief
of neurobiology research at the VA Greater Los Angeles Health
Care System in Sepulveda, said in a prepared statement.
"The
findings should aid in the development of drugs to induce
sleep and to increase alertness," Siegel said.
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