Author:
Wu H,Stone WS,Hsi X,Zhuang J,Huang L,Yin Y,Zhang L,Zhao Z
Abstract
Sleep is regulated by complex biological systems and
environmental influences, neither of which is fully clarified. This
study demonstrates differential effects of partial sleep deprivation
(SD) on sleep architecture and psychomotor vigilance task (PVT)
performance using two different protocols (sequentially) that
each restricted daily sleep to 3 hours in healthy adult men. The
protocols differed only in the period of sleep restriction; in one,
sleep was restricted to a 3-hour block from 12:00 AM to 3:00 AM,
and in the other, sleep was restricted to a block from 3:00 AM to
6:00 AM. Subjects in the earlier sleep restriction period showed a
significantly lower percentage of rapid-eye-movement (REM)
sleep after 4 days (17.0 vs. 25.7 %) and a longer latency to the
onset of REM sleep (L-REM) after 1 day (78.8 vs. 45.5 min) than
they did in the later sleep restriction period. Reaction times on
PVT performance were also better (i.e. shorter) in the earlier SR
period on day 4 (249.8 vs. 272 ms). These data support the view
that earlier-night sleep may be more beneficial for daytime
vigilance than later-night sleep. The study also showed that
cumulative declines in daytime vigilance resulted from loss of
total sleep time, rather than from specific stages, and
underscored the reversibility of SR effects with greater amounts
of sleep.
Publisher
Institute of Physiology of the Czech Academy of Sciences
Subject
General Medicine,Physiology
Cited by
23 articles.
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