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    Following a traumatic brain injury (TBI), sleep-wake disturbances are one of the most prevalent and debilitating symptoms. A better understanding of the impact that sleep disturbances have on chronic TBI symptomatology is likely to maximize long-term recovery. While the current treatments of sleep-wake disturbances following TBI are disorder-specific, identifying the underlying pathology may lead to improved pharmacological and rehabilitative treatments. A TBI initiates secondary cellular and molecular cascades that include inflammation and the production of cytokines, as well endocrine dysfunction and concomitant disturbances in hormone secretions. Hormones and cytokines are mediators of the inflammatory response that also regulate endocrine function, thus, communication between the immune and endocrine systems is bidirectional. Interestingly, both the immune and endocrine systems play a critical role in sleep regulation. This narrative review summarizes sleep-wake disturbances reported after TBI and synthesizes the current human and animal literature centered on the hypothesis that immune-endocrine interactions after TBI may induce both acute and chronic disturbances of sleep and wakefulness. Furthermore, we discuss how the immune and endocrine systems may be plausible therapeutic targets to treat TBI-induced sleep disturbances. Copyright © 2022 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

    Citation

    Rachel K Rowe, Grace S Griesbach. Immune-endocrine interactions in the pathophysiology of sleep-wake disturbances following traumatic brain injury: A narrative review. Brain research bulletin. 2022 Jul;185:117-128

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    PMID: 35537569

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