Elsevier

Medical Hypotheses

Volume 50, Issue 2, February 1998, Pages 139-145
Medical Hypotheses

Essential fatty acids and sleep: mini-review and hypothesis

https://doi.org/10.1016/S0306-9877(98)90200-6Get rights and content
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Abstract

The neurochemical basis of sleep mechanisms (onset and maintenance) is still controversial although the phenomenon itself is known to be mediated by more than a single molecule. The list of suggested endogenous sleep substances is rather long, and there is no single ‘sleep center’ identified in the brain.

The role of fatty acids, and essential fatty acids in particular, has been ignored in sleep research. This review proposes an integration of the current knowledge about the effects of fatty acids in sleep neurochemistry, wherein fatty acids are seen to exert a direct effect on neuronal membrane structure or indirectly on the dynamics of biochemical compounds (complex lipids, prostaglandins, neurotransmitters, amino acids, interleukins) necessary for the initiation and maintenance of sleep.

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