article
Comparação entre sonhos e psicose: do processamento de memórias aos déficits cognitivos
Fecha
2012-07Autor
Mota, Natália Bezerra
Ribeiro, Sidarta Tollendal Gomes
Resumen
Recognition of the many similarities between dreams and psychotic attacks played a key role at the dawn
of psychiatry. This interest faded after the discovery of the REM sleep and antipsychotics, which suggested
that dreaming is a mere epiphenomenon of REM sleep, and that psychosis can be reduced to the action of
neurotransmitters. Recent evidence, however, calls for a reexamination of this issue. We searched for articles
in Pubmed using the keywords “schizophrenia”, “dream”, “electrophysiology”, “cognitive defi cit”, “sleep” and
“memory”, and compared studies on the neurophysiological basis of psychosis and its relationship to cognitive
defi cits, and the role of sleep in memory process. There are many similarities between dream and psychosis,
including anatomical, neurochemical, electrophysiological and cognitive aspects. Altogether, the studies point to
a common biological mechanism underlying both phenomena. The empirical evidence supports the notion that
the neural mechanisms of dreaming are triggered during the course of psychosis, causing dream-like symptoms
such as delirium and hallucination, which characterize psychotic attacks. The role of sleep in memory process
may explain the cognitive defi cits of psychosis.