Gender difference in the effect of examination stress on brain oscillations during memory tasks

Joint Authors

Yusuf, Shayma M.
Ibrahim, Daliyah
Usamah, Ahmad
al-Wazir, Yasir M.
al-Baz, Amani

Source

Suez Canal University Medical Journal

Issue

Vol. 17, Issue 1 (30 Jun. 2014), pp.21-28, 8 p.

Publisher

Suez Canal University Faculty of Medicine

Publication Date

2014-06-30

Country of Publication

Egypt

No. of Pages

8

Main Subjects

Biology
Medicine

Topics

Abstract EN

Researches revealed that increased levels of stress hormones lead to enhancement of memory consolidation in rodents.

Recently, it became apparent that the brain oscillations re-flect cognitive aspects and information processing in the brain.

Quantitative electroencephalo-gram (qEEG) provides an objective assessment of the electrical activity of the brain via many techniques such as power spectral analysis and coherence.

Aim: To assess the effect of gender on the qEEG oscillations during the delayed memory retrieval after exposure to acute stress.

Subjects and Methods: This prospective (longitudinal) study was applied on 34 healthy under-graduate medical students from both genders (17 males and 17 females) in the Faculty of Medi-cine, Suez Canal University.

The qEEG analysis was done in neurology department, Suez Canal University Hospital using the relative power (RP) during memory tasks.

Serum cortisol was ana-lyzed by enzyme linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) as a measure for stress.

Results: The re-sults revealed insignificant effect of gender on the quantitative analysis of EEG oscillations re-garding the mean relative power in all frequency bands (delta "δ": 2.36±0.72; 2.04±0.46, theta "Ɵ": 13.72±3.13; 12.72±3.58, alpha "α": 12.72±3.58; 18.50±3.81 and beta "β": 33.26±3.23; 32.72±4.47 for males and females respectively during the examination period).

Whereas, there was a posi-tive correlation between the serum cortisol level and the mean relative power of delta (r: 0.53, p=0.03), and theta (r: 0.55, p=0.02) and a negative correlation with beta (r: -0.51, p= 0.04) bands in males only.

Conclusion: There are positive correlations for delta and theta bands and negative correlation for beta band between the quantitative electroencephalographic analysis (RP) with the hormonal measure of the stress in spite of the insignificant changes in the EEG oscillations in the non-stress and stress periods.

American Psychological Association (APA)

Yusuf, Shayma M.& Ibrahim, Daliyah& al-Baz, Amani& Usamah, Ahmad& al-Wazir, Yasir M.. 2014. Gender difference in the effect of examination stress on brain oscillations during memory tasks. Suez Canal University Medical Journal،Vol. 17, no. 1, pp.21-28.
https://search.emarefa.net/detail/BIM-576840

Modern Language Association (MLA)

Yusuf, Shayma M.…[et al.]. Gender difference in the effect of examination stress on brain oscillations during memory tasks. Suez Canal University Medical Journal Vol. 17, no. 1 (Jun. 2014), pp.21-28.
https://search.emarefa.net/detail/BIM-576840

American Medical Association (AMA)

Yusuf, Shayma M.& Ibrahim, Daliyah& al-Baz, Amani& Usamah, Ahmad& al-Wazir, Yasir M.. Gender difference in the effect of examination stress on brain oscillations during memory tasks. Suez Canal University Medical Journal. 2014. Vol. 17, no. 1, pp.21-28.
https://search.emarefa.net/detail/BIM-576840

Data Type

Journal Articles

Language

English

Notes

Includes bibliographical references : p. 27-28

Record ID

BIM-576840