Abstract

Chronic insomnia without intervention will do harm to people's physical and psychological health as well as the quality of life. While ensuring efficacy, traditional Chinese medicine therapy, such as acupuncture, overcomes the side effects of drugs. However, the molecular mechanism of traditional medicine is unclear and it encounters many obstacles in repetitiveness and popularization. On the other side, the placebo effects also need to be eliminated during the intervention. In this study, a number of indicators such as duration of sleep latency, serum markers, pineal gland immunohistochemistry, and gut microbes were detected in the PCPA-induced insomnia mice to compare the effects between acupuncture and hypnotic drug treatments. Although the food intake and weight were not changed, the results show that serum maker and gut microbiota alterations were mediated by concurrent changes in sleep disorder induced by PCPA in mice. Compared with the PCPA-induced insomnia group, dopamine, 5-hydroxytryptamine, and norepinephrine were reduced in serum, and the melatonin was increased in the pineal gland of the acupuncture group as well as zopiclone drug group. Moreover, the analysis results from 16S tag sequencing of the gut microbiome bacterial rRNA hypervariable region show the same improvement effects between the two medical intervention groups. A co-occurrence network analysis showed that blank and acupuncture networks exhibited higher similarity than sham and zopiclone networks and the sham network possessed the highest complexity of microbial communities. Taken together, the gut microbiome will likely be a new target for improving sleep disorders, and taking into account the side effects of hypnotic drugs, nonpharmacological interventions such as acupuncture may be an effective means and have greater clinical benefits.

Highlights

  • Insomnia is the second most common mental disorder [1], associated with depression [2], cardiovascular disease [3], type 2 diabetes, and obesity [4], which affects 25–30% of adults worldwide [5]

  • We conducted a sham-controlled study to assess the benefits of acupuncture to improve sleep of PCPAinduced insomnia mice. e effects of sleep loss and improvement on the gut microbiota were evaluated and combined with a number of indicators to verify whether acupuncture therapy has similar efficacy with hypnotics

  • To investigate the effects of treatment on the development of insomnia in mice, the mice with insomnia were divided into groups received intervention including zopiclone (Zop group) and acupuncture (Acu group) (n = 10 each group, see Figure 1)

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Summary

Research Article

Received 21 November 2019; Revised 7 August 2020; Accepted 15 October 2020; Published 30 October 2020. A number of indicators such as duration of sleep latency, serum markers, pineal gland immunohistochemistry, and gut microbes were detected in the PCPA-induced insomnia mice to compare the effects between acupuncture and hypnotic drug treatments. Compared with the PCPA-induced insomnia group, dopamine, 5-hydroxytryptamine, and norepinephrine were reduced in serum, and the melatonin was increased in the pineal gland of the acupuncture group as well as zopiclone drug group. The analysis results from 16S tag sequencing of the gut microbiome bacterial rRNA hypervariable region show the same improvement effects between the two medical intervention groups. The gut microbiome will likely be a new target for improving sleep disorders, and taking into account the side effects of hypnotic drugs, nonpharmacological interventions such as acupuncture may be an effective means and have greater clinical benefits

Introduction
Materials and Methods
Saline equal volume
Results
Acu Zop
Blank Zop
Alpha diversity measure
Lachnospiraceae Prevotellaceae
Sample Type
Sham Acupunture
Network indexes
Full Text
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