Abstract
Study Objectives: Sleep quality commonly diminishes with age, and, further, aging men often exhibit a wider range of sleep pathologies than women. We used a freely available, web-based discovery technique (Semantic MEDLINE) supported by semantic relationships to automatically extract information from MEDLINE titles and abstracts. Design: We assumed that testosterone is associated with sleep (the A-C relationship in the paradigm) and looked for a mechanism to explain this association (B explanatory link) as a potential or partial mechanism underpinning the etiology of eroded sleep quality in aging men. Measurements and Results: Review of full-text papers in critical nodes discovered in this manner resulted in the proposal that testosterone enhances sleep by inhibiting cortisol. Using this discovery method, we posit, and could confirm as a novel hypothesis, cortisol as part of a mechanistic link elucidating the observed correlation between decreased testosterone in aging men and diminished sleep quality. Conclusions: This approach is publically available and useful not only in this manner but also to generate from the literature alternative explanatory models for observed experimental results.
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Miller, C. M., Rindflesch, T. C., Fiszman, M., Hristovski, D., Shin, D., Rosemblat, G., … Strohl, K. P. (2012). A closed literature-based discovery technique finds a mechanistic link between hypogonadism and diminished sleep quality in aging men. Sleep, 35(2), 279–285. https://doi.org/10.5665/sleep.1640
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