| Understanding
Sleep
Sleep: A Dynamic Activity
Until the 1950s, most people thought of sleep as a passive, dormant
part of our daily lives. We now know that our brains are very active
during sleep. Moreover, sleep affects our daily functioning and
our physical and mental health in many ways that we are just beginning
to understand.
Nerve-signaling chemicals called neurotransmitters control whether
we are asleep or awake by acting on different groups of nerve cells,
or neurons, in the brain. Neurons in the brainstem, which connects
the brain with the spinal cord, produce neurotransmitters such as
serotonin and norepinephrine that keep some parts of the brain active
while we are awake. Other neurons at the base of the brain begin
signaling when we fall asleep. These neurons appear to "switch
off" the signals that keep us awake. Research also suggests
that a chemical called adenosine builds up in our blood while we
are awake and causes drowsiness. This chemical gradually breaks
down while we sleep.
During sleep, we usually pass through five phases of sleep: stages
1, 2, 3, 4 and REM (rapid eye movement) sleep. These stages progress
in a cycle from stage 1 to REM sleep, then the cycle starts over
again with stage 1. We spend almost 50 percent of our total sleep
time in stage 2 sleep, about 20 percent in REM sleep and the remaining
30 percent in the other stages. Infants, by contrast, spend about
half of their sleep time in REM sleep.
During stage 1, which is light sleep, we drift in and out of sleep
and can be awakened easily. Our eyes move very slowly and muscle
activity slows. People awakened from stage 1 sleep often remember
fragmented visual images. Many also experience sudden muscle contractions
called hypnic myoclonia, often preceded by a sensation of starting
to fall. These sudden movements are similar to the "jump"
we make when startled. When we enter stage 2 sleep, our eye movements
stop and our brain waves (fluctuations of electrical activity that
can be measured by electrodes) become slower, with occasional bursts
of rapid waves called sleep spindles. In stage 3, extremely slow
brain waves called delta waves begin to appear, interspersed with
smaller, faster waves. By stage 4, the brain produces delta waves
almost exclusively. It is very difficult to wake someone during
stages 3 and 4, which together are called deep sleep. There is no
eye movement or muscle activity. People awakened during deep sleep
do not adjust immediately and often feel groggy and disoriented
for several minutes after they wake up. Some children experience
bedwetting, night terrors or sleepwalking during deep sleep.
When we switch into REM sleep, our breathing becomes more rapid,
irregular and shallow; our eyes jerk rapidly in various directions;
and our limb muscles become temporarily paralyzed. Our heart rate
increases, our blood pressure rises and males develop penile erections.
When people awaken during REM sleep, they often describe bizarre
and illogical tales — dreams.
The first REM sleep period usually occurs about 70 to 90 minutes
after we fall asleep. A complete sleep cycle takes 90 to 110 minutes
on average. The first sleep cycles each night contain relatively
short REM periods and long periods of deep sleep. As the night progresses,
REM sleep periods increase in length while deep sleep decreases.
By morning, people spend nearly all their sleep time in stages 1,
2 and REM.
People awakened after sleeping more than a few minutes are usually
unable to recall the last few minutes before they fell asleep. This
sleep-related form of amnesia is the reason people often forget
telephone calls or conversations they've had in the middle of the
night. It also explains why we often do not remember our alarms
ringing in the morning if we go right back to sleep after turning
them off.
Since sleep and wakefulness are influenced by different neurotransmitter
signals in the brain, foods and medicines that change the balance
of these signals affect whether we feel alert or drowsy and how
well we sleep. Caffeinated drinks such as coffee and drugs such
as diet pills and decongestants stimulate some parts of the brain
and can cause insomnia, or an inability to sleep. Many antidepressants
suppress REM sleep. Heavy smokers often sleep very lightly and have
reduced amounts of REM sleep. They also tend to wake up after three
to four hours of sleep due to nicotine withdrawal. Many people who
suffer from insomnia try to solve the problem with alcohol —
the so-called night cap. While alcohol does help people fall into
light sleep, it also robs them of REM and the deeper, more restorative
stages of sleep. Instead, it keeps them in the lighter stages of
sleep, from which they can be awakened easily.
People lose some of the ability to regulate their body temperature
during REM, so abnormally hot or cold temperatures in the environment
can disrupt this stage of sleep. If our REM sleep is disrupted one
night, our bodies don't follow the normal sleep cycle progression
the next time we doze off. Instead, we often slip directly into
REM sleep and go through extended periods of REM until we "catch
up" on this stage of sleep.
People who are under anesthesia or in a coma are often said to
be asleep. However, people in these conditions cannot be awakened
and do not produce the complex, active brain wave patterns seen
in normal sleep. Instead, their brain waves are very slow and weak,
sometimes all but undetectable.
How Much Sleep Do We Need?
The amount of sleep each person needs depends on many factors,
including age. Infants generally require about 16 hours a day, while
teenagers need about nine hours on average. For most adults, seven
to eight hours a night appears to be the best amount of sleep, although
some people may need as few as five hours or as many as 10 hours
of sleep each day. Women in the first three months of pregnancy
often need several more hours of sleep than usual. The amount of
sleep a person needs also increases if he or she has been deprived
of sleep in previous days. Getting too little sleep creates a "sleep
debt," which is much like being overdrawn at a bank. Eventually,
your body will demand that the debt be repaid. We don't seem to
adapt to getting less sleep than we need; while we may get used
to a sleep-depriving schedule, our judgment, reaction time and other
functions are still impaired.
People tend to sleep more lightly and for shorter time spans as
they get older, although they generally need about the same amount
of sleep as they needed in early adulthood. About half of all people
over 65 have frequent sleeping problems, such as insomnia, and deep
sleep stages in many elderly people often become very short or stop
completely. This change may be a normal part of aging, or it may
result from medical problems that are common in elderly people and
from the medications and other treatments for those problems.
Experts say that if you feel drowsy during the day, even during
boring activities, you haven't had enough sleep. If you routinely
fall asleep within five minutes of lying down, you probably have
severe sleep deprivation, possibly even a sleep disorder. Microsleeps,
or very brief episodes of sleep in an otherwise awake person, are
another mark of sleep deprivation. In many cases, people are not
aware that they are experiencing microsleeps. The widespread practice
of "burning the candle at both ends" in western industrialized
societies has created so much sleep deprivation that what is really
abnormal sleepiness is now almost the norm.
Many studies make it clear that sleep deprivation is dangerous.
Sleep-deprived people who are tested by using a driving simulator
or by performing a hand-eye coordination task perform as badly as
or worse than those who are intoxicated. Sleep deprivation also
magnifies alcohol's effects on the body, so a fatigued person who
drinks will become much more impaired than someone who is well-rested.
Driver fatigue is responsible for an estimated 100,000 motor vehicle
accidents and 1500 deaths each year, according to the National Highway
Traffic Safety Administration. Since drowsiness is the brain's last
step before falling asleep, driving while drowsy can — and
often does — lead to disaster. Caffeine and other stimulants
cannot overcome the effects of severe sleep deprivation. The National
Sleep Foundation says that if you have trouble keeping your eyes
focused, if you can't stop yawning or if you can't remember driving
the last few miles, you are probably too drowsy to drive safely.
What Does Sleep
Do For Us?
Although scientists are still trying to
learn exactly why people need sleep, animal studies show that sleep
is necessary for survival. For example, while rats normally live
for two to three years, those deprived of REM sleep survive only
about five weeks on average, and rats deprived of all sleep stages
live only about three weeks. Sleep-deprived rats also develop abnormally
low body temperatures and sores on their tail and paws. The sores
may develop because the rats' immune systems become impaired. Some
studies suggest that sleep deprivation affects the immune system
in detrimental ways.
Sleep appears necessary for our nervous systems to work properly.
Too little sleep leaves us drowsy and unable to concentrate the
next day. It also leads to impaired memory and physical performance
and reduced ability to carry out math calculations. If sleep deprivation
continues, hallucinations and mood swings may develop. Some experts
believe sleep gives neurons used while we are awake a chance to
shut down and repair themselves. Without sleep, neurons may become
so depleted in energy or so polluted with byproducts of normal cellular
activities that they begin to malfunction. Sleep also may give the
brain a chance to exercise important neuronal connections that might
otherwise deteriorate from lack of activity.
Deep sleep coincides with the release of growth hormone in children
and young adults. Many of the body's cells also show increased production
and reduced breakdown of proteins during deep sleep. Since proteins
are the building blocks needed for cell growth and for repair of
damage from factors like stress and ultraviolet rays, deep sleep
may truly be "beauty sleep." Activity in parts of the
brain that control emotions, decision-making processes and social
interactions is drastically reduced during deep sleep, suggesting
that this type of sleep may help people maintain optimal emotional
and social functioning while they are awake. A study in rats also
showed that certain nerve-signaling patterns which the rats generated
during the day were repeated during deep sleep. This pattern repetition
may help encode memories and improve learning.
Dreaming and REM
Sleep
We typically spend more than two hours
each night dreaming. Scientists do not know much about how or why
we dream. Sigmund Freud, who greatly influenced the field of psychology,
believed dreaming was a "safety valve" for unconscious
desires. Only after 1953, when researchers first described REM in
sleeping infants, did scientists begin to carefully study sleep
and dreaming. They soon realized that the strange, illogical experiences
we call dreams almost always occur during REM sleep. While most
mammals and birds show signs of REM sleep, reptiles and other cold-blooded
animals do not.
REM sleep begins with signals from an area at the base of the brain
called the pons. These signals travel to a brain region called the
thalamus, which relays them to the cerebral cortex — the outer
layer of the brain that is responsible for learning, thinking and
organizing information. The pons also sends signals that shut off
neurons in the spinal cord, causing temporary paralysis of the limb
muscles. If something interferes with this paralysis, people will
begin to physically "act out" their dreams — a rare,
dangerous problem called REM sleep behavior disorder. A person dreaming
about a ball game, for example, may run headlong into furniture
or blindly strike someone sleeping nearby while trying to catch
a ball in the dream.
REM sleep stimulates the brain regions used in learning. This may
be important for normal brain development during infancy, which
would explain why infants spend much more time in REM sleep than
adults. Like deep sleep, REM sleep is associated with increased
production of proteins. One study found that REM sleep affects learning
of certain mental skills. People taught a skill and then deprived
of non-REM sleep could recall what they had learned after sleeping,
while people deprived of REM sleep could not.
Some scientists believe dreams are the cortex's attempt to find
meaning in the random signals that it receives during REM sleep.
The cortex is the part of the brain that interprets and organizes
information from the environment during consciousness. It may be
that, given random signals from the pons during REM sleep, the cortex
tries to interpret these signals as well, creating a "story"
out of fragmented brain activity.
Sleep and Circadian
Rhythms
Circadian rhythms are regular changes in
mental and physical characteristics that occur in the course of
a day (circadian is Latin for "around a day"). Most circadian
rhythms are controlled by the body's biological "clock."
This clock, called the suprachiasmatic nucleus or SCN, is actually
a pair of pinhead-sized brain structures that together contain about
20,000 neurons. The SCN rests in a part of the brain called the
hypothalamus, just above the point where the optic nerves cross.
Light that reaches photoreceptors in the retina (a tissue at the
back of the eye) creates signals that travel along the optic nerve
to the SCN.
Signals from the SCN travel to several brain regions, including
the pineal gland, which responds to light-induced signals by switching
off production of the hormone melatonin. The body's level of melatonin
normally increases after darkness falls, making people feel drowsy.
The SCN also governs functions that are synchronized with the sleep/wake
cycle, including body temperature, hormone secretion, urine production
and changes in blood pressure.
By depriving people of light and other external time cues, scientists
have learned that most people's biological clocks work on a 25-hour
cycle rather than a 24-hour one. But because sunlight or other bright
lights can reset the SCN, our biological cycles normally follow
the 24-hour cycle of the sun, rather than our innate cycle. Circadian
rhythms can be affected to some degree by almost any kind of external
time cue, such as the beeping of your alarm clock, the clatter of
a garbage truck or the timing of your meals. Scientists call external
time cues zeitgebers (German for "time givers").
When travelers pass from one time zone to another, they suffer
from disrupted circadian rhythms, an uncomfortable feeling known
as jet lag. For instance, if you travel from California to New York,
you "lose" three hours according to your body's clock.
You will feel tired when the alarm rings at 8 a.m. the next morning
because, according to your body's clock, it is still 5 a.m. It usually
takes several days for your body's cycles to adjust to the new time.
To reduce the effects of jet lag, some doctors try to manipulate
the biological clock with a technique called light therapy. They
expose people to special lights, many times brighter than ordinary
household light, for several hours near the time the subjects want
to wake up. This helps them reset their biological clocks and adjust
to a new time zone.
Symptoms much like jet lag are common in people who work nights
or who perform shift work. Because these people's work schedules
are at odds with powerful sleep-regulating cues like sunlight, they
often become uncontrollably drowsy during work, and they may suffer
insomnia or other problems when they try to sleep. Shift workers
have an increased risk of heart problems, digestive disturbances,
and emotional and mental problems, all of which may be related to
their sleeping problems. The number and severity of workplace accidents
also tend to increase during the night shift. Major industrial accidents
attributed partly to errors made by fatigued night-shift workers
include the Exxon Valdez oil spill and the Three Mile Island and
Chernobyl nuclear power plant accidents. One study also found that
medical interns working on the night shift are twice as likely as
others to misinterpret hospital test records, which could endanger
their patients. It may be possible to reduce shift-related fatigue
by using bright lights in the workplace, minimizing shift changes
and taking scheduled naps.
Many people with total blindness experience life-long sleeping
problems because their retinas are unable to detect light. These
people have a kind of permanent jet lag and periodic insomnia because
their circadian rhythms follow their innate cycle rather than a
24-hour one. Daily supplements of melatonin may improve night-time
sleep for such patients. However, since the high doses of melatonin
found in most supplements can build up in the body, long-term use
of this substance may create new problems. Because the potential
side effects of melatonin supplements are still largely unknown,
most experts discourage melatonin use by the general public.
Sleep and Disease
Sleep and sleep-related problems play a
role in a large number of human disorders and affect almost every
field of medicine. For example, problems like stroke and asthma
attacks tend to occur more frequently during the night and early
morning, perhaps due to changes in hormones, heart rate and other
characteristics associated with sleep. Sleep also affects some kinds
of epilepsy in complex ways. REM sleep seems to help prevent seizures
that begin in one part of the brain from spreading to other brain
regions, while deep sleep may promote the spread of these seizures.
Sleep deprivation also triggers seizures in people with some types
of epilepsy.
Neurons that control sleep interact closely with the immune system.
As anyone who has had the flu knows, infectious diseases tend to
make us feel sleepy. This probably happens because cytokines, chemicals
our immune systems produce while fighting an infection, are powerful
sleep-inducing chemicals. Sleep may help the body conserve energy
and other resources that the immune system needs to mount an attack.
Sleeping problems occur in almost all people with mental disorders,
including those with depression and schizophrenia. People with depression,
for example, often awaken in the early hours of the morning and
find themselves unable to get back to sleep. The amount of sleep
a person gets also strongly influences the symptoms of mental disorders.
Sleep deprivation is an effective therapy for people with certain
types of depression, while it can actually cause depression in other
people. Extreme sleep deprivation can lead to a seemingly psychotic
state of paranoia and hallucinations in otherwise healthy people,
and disrupted sleep can trigger episodes of mania (agitation and
hyperactivity) in people with manic depression.
Sleeping problems are common in many other disorders as well, including
Alzheimer's disease, stroke, cancer and head injury. These sleeping
problems may arise from changes in the brain regions and neurotransmitters
that control sleep, or from the drugs used to control symptoms of
other disorders. In patients who are hospitalized or who receive
round-the-clock care, treatment schedules or hospital routines also
may disrupt sleep. The old joke about a patient being awakened by
a nurse so he could take a sleeping pill contains a grain of truth.
Once sleeping problems develop, they can add to a person's impairment
and cause confusion, frustration, or depression. Patients who are
unable to sleep also notice pain more and may increase their requests
for pain medication. Better management of sleeping problems in people
who have other disorders could improve these patients' health and
quality of life.
Sleep Disorders
At least 40 million Americans each
year suffer from chronic, long-term sleep disorders each year, and
an additional 20 million experience occasional sleeping problems.
These disorders and the resulting sleep deprivation interfere with
work, driving and social activities. They also account for an estimated
$16 billion in medical costs each year, while the indirect costs
due to lost productivity and other factors are probably much greater.
Doctors have described more than 70 sleep disorders, most of which
can be managed effectively once they are correctly diagnosed. The
most common sleep disorders include insomnia, sleep apnea, restless
legs syndrome and narcolepsy.
Insomnia
Almost everyone occasionally suffers from
short-term insomnia. This problem can result from stress, jet lag,
diet or many other factors. Insomnia almost always affects job performance
and well-being the next day. About 60 million Americans a year have
insomnia frequently or for extended periods of time, which leads
to even more serious sleep deficits. Insomnia tends to increase
with age and affects about 40 percent of women and 30 percent of
men. It is often the major disabling symptom of an underlying medical
disorder.
For short-term insomnia, doctors may prescribe sleeping pills.
Most sleeping pills stop working after several weeks of nightly
use, however, and long-term use can actually interfere with good
sleep. Mild insomnia often can be prevented or cured by practicing
good sleep habits. For more serious cases of insomnia, researchers
are experimenting with light therapy and other ways to alter circadian
cycles.
Sleep Apnea
Sleep apnea is a disorder of interrupted breathing during sleep.
It usually occurs in association with fat buildup or loss of muscle
tone with aging. These changes allow the windpipe to collapse during
breathing when muscles relax during sleep. This problem, called
obstructive sleep apnea, is usually associated with loud snoring
(though not everyone who snores has this disorder). Sleep apnea
also can occur if the neurons that control breathing malfunction
during sleep.
During an episode of obstructive apnea, the person's effort to
inhale air creates suction that collapses the windpipe. This blocks
the air flow for 10 seconds to a minute while the sleeping person
struggles to breathe. When the person's blood oxygen level falls,
the brain responds by awakening the person enough to tighten the
upper airway muscles and open the windpipe. The person may snort
or gasp, then resume snoring. This cycle may be repeated hundreds
of times a night. The frequent awakenings that sleep apnea patients
experience leave them continually sleepy and may lead to personality
changes such as irritability or depression. Sleep apnea also deprives
the person of oxygen, which can lead to morning headaches, a loss
of interest in sex or a decline in mental functioning. It also is
linked to high blood pressure, irregular heartbeats, and an increased
risk of heart attacks and stroke. Patients with severe, untreated
sleep apnea are two to three times more likely to have automobile
accidents than the general population. In some high-risk individuals,
sleep apnea may even lead to sudden death from respiratory arrest
during sleep.
An estimated 18 million Americans have sleep apnea. However, few
of them have had the problem diagnosed. Patients with the typical
features of sleep apnea, such as loud snoring, obesity and excessive
daytime sleepiness, should be referred to a specialized sleep center
that can perform a test called polysomnography. This test records
the patient's brain waves, heartbeat and breathing during an entire
night. If sleep apnea is diagnosed, several treatments are available.
Mild sleep apnea frequently can be overcome through weight loss
or by preventing the person from sleeping on his or her back. Other
people may need special devices or surgery to correct the obstruction.
People with sleep apnea should never take sedatives or sleeping
pills, which can prevent them from awakening enough to breathe.
Restless Legs Syndrome
Restless legs syndrome (RLS), a familial disorder causing unpleasant
crawling, prickling or tingling sensations in the legs and feet
and an urge to move them for relief, is emerging as one of the most
common sleep disorders, especially among older people. This disorder,
which affects as many as 12 million Americans, leads to constant
leg movement during the day and insomnia at night. Severe RLS is
most common in elderly people, though symptoms may develop at any
age. In some cases, it may be linked to other conditions such as
anemia, pregnancy or diabetes.
Many RLS patients also have a disorder known as periodic limb movement
disorder or PLMD, which causes repetitive jerking movements of the
limbs, especially the legs. These movements occur every 20 to 40
seconds and cause repeated awakening and severely fragmented sleep.
In one study, RLS and PLMD accounted for a third of the insomnia
seen in patients older than age 60.
RLS and PLMD often can be relieved by drugs that affect the neurotransmitter
dopamine, suggesting that dopamine abnormalities underlie these
disorders' symptoms. Learning how these disorders occur may lead
to better therapies in the future.
Narcolepsy
Narcolepsy affects an estimated 250,000 Americans. People with narcolepsy
have frequent "sleep attacks" at various times of the
day, even if they have had a normal amount of night-time sleep.
These attacks last from several seconds to more than 30 minutes.
People with narcolepsy also may experience cataplexy (loss of muscle
control during emotional situations), hallucinations, temporary
paralysis when they awaken and disrupted night-time sleep. These
symptoms seem to be features of REM sleep that appear during waking,
which suggests that narcolepsy is a disorder of sleep regulation.
The symptoms of narcolepsy typically appear during adolescence,
though it often takes years to obtain a correct diagnosis. The disorder
(or at least a predisposition to it) is usually hereditary, but
it occasionally is linked to brain damage from a head injury or
neurological disease.
Once narcolepsy is diagnosed, stimulants, antidepressants or other
drugs can help control the symptoms and prevent the embarrassing
and dangerous effects of falling asleep at improper times. Naps
at certain times of the day also may reduce the excessive daytime
sleepiness.
In 1999, a research team working with canine models identified
a gene that causes narcolepsy — a breakthrough that brings
a cure for this disabling condition within reach. The gene, hypocretin
receptor 2, codes for a protein that allows brain cells to receive
instructions from other cells. The defective versions of the gene
encode proteins that cannot recognize these messages, perhaps cutting
the cells off from messages that promote wakefulness. The researchers
know that the same gene exists in humans, and they are currently
searching for defective versions in people with narcolepsy.
The Future
Sleep research is expanding and attracting
more and more attention from scientists. Researchers now know that
sleep is an active and dynamic state that greatly influences our
waking hours, and they realize that we must understand sleep to
fully understand the brain. Innovative techniques, such as brain
imaging, can now help researchers understand how different brain
regions function during sleep and how different activities and disorders
affect sleep. Understanding the factors that affect sleep in health
and disease also may lead to revolutionary new therapies for sleep
disorders and to ways of overcoming jet lag and the problems associated
with shift work. We can expect these and many other benefits from
research that will allow us to truly understand sleep's impact on
our lives.
Tips for a Good
Night's Sleep:
Adapted from "When You Can't Sleep:
The ABCs of ZZZs," by the National Sleep Foundation
Set a schedule:
Go to bed at a set time each night and get up at the same time each
morning. Disrupting this schedule may lead to insomnia. "Sleeping
in" on weekends also makes it harder to wake up early on Monday
morning because it re-sets your sleep cycles for a later awakening.
- Exercise. Try to exercise 20
to 30 minutes a day. Daily exercise often helps people sleep,
although a workout soon before bedtime may interfere with sleep.
For maximum benefit, try to get your exercise about five to six
hours before going to bed.
- Avoid caffeine, nicotine, and alcohol.
Avoid drinks that contain caffeine, which acts as a stimulant
and keeps people awake. Sources of caffeine include coffee, chocolate,
soft drinks, non-herbal teas, diet drugs and some pain relievers.
Smokers tend to sleep very lightly and often wake up in the early
morning due to nicotine withdrawal. Alcohol robs people of deep
sleep and REM sleep and keeps them in the lighter stages of sleep.
- Relax before bed. A warm bath,
reading or another relaxing routine can make it easier to fall
sleep. You can train yourself to associate certain restful activities
with sleep and make them part of your bedtime ritual.
- Sleep until sunlight. If possible,
wake up with the sun or use very bright lights in the morning.
Sunlight helps the body's internal biological clock reset itself
each day. Sleep experts recommend exposure to an hour of morning
sunlight for people having problems falling asleep.
- Don't lie in bed awake. If
you can't get to sleep, don't just lie in bed. Do something else,
like reading, watching television or listening to music, until
you feel tired. The anxiety of being unable to fall asleep can
actually contribute to insomnia.
- Control your room temperature.
Maintain a comfortable temperature in the bedroom. Extreme temperatures
may disrupt sleep or prevent you from falling asleep.
- See a doctor if your sleeping problem
continues. If you have trouble falling asleep night after
night, or if you always feel tired the next day, then you may
have a sleep disorder and should see a physician. Your primary
care physician may be able to help you; if not, you can probably
find a sleep specialist at a major hospital near you. Most sleep
disorders can be treated effectively, so you can finally get that
good night's sleep you need.
Additional Resource
National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke
Brain Resources and Information Network (BRAIN)
P.O. Box 5801
Bethesda, MD 20824
1-800-352-9424
Internet: www.ninds.nih.gov
Source: National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke,
National Institutes of Health
Updated: October 13, 2006
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