Homeostatic response to sleep deprivation and circadian rhythmicity are intact in older adults with insomnia

Author:

Tracy Eunjin Lee1ORCID,Zhang Jun2,Wilckens Kristine1,Krafty Robert T3,Hasler Brant P1ORCID,Hall Martica H1ORCID,Buysse Daniel J1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Psychiatry, University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine , Pittsburgh, PA , USA

2. Department of Biostatistics, University of Pittsburgh . Pittsburgh, PA , USA

3. Department of Biostatics and Bioinformatics, Emory University , Atlanta, GA , USA

Abstract

Abstract Study Objectives We examined whether homeostatic sleep drive and circadian rhythmicity differ in older adults with insomnia (OAI) compared to older good sleepers (GS). Methods OAI (n = 37) and GS (n = 30) participated in a 60-h in-lab study with sleep deprivation and constant routine paradigms. Homeostatic sleep drive was assessed by examining the effect of sleep deprivation on delta EEG power and theta EEG power, and repeated sleep latency tests. Circadian rhythm was assessed with salivary melatonin (phase and amplitude), core body temperature (phase, amplitude, and mesor), and sleep latency during a constant routine paradigm. Mixed models were used to assess interactions of group (OAS vs GS) with homeostatic sleep and circadian effects. Results Compared to GS, OAI showed a greater linear increase in waking theta power during sleep deprivation, but the two groups did not show differential responses to sleep deprivation in delta EEG, or in repeated sleep latency tests. The two groups did not differ in circadian phase or amplitude of melatonin or core body temperature rhythms. OAI had a significantly elevated core body temperature mesor compared to GS. Conclusions Homeostatic response to sleep deprivation was intact in OAI compared to GS; theta EEG power suggested a greater homeostatic response in OAI. Circadian rhythm amplitude and phase were similar in OAI compared to GS. Elevated body temperature mesor in OAI may indicate elevated physiological arousal. These findings suggest that effective treatments for insomnia in older adults may leverage intact sleep and circadian regulatory mechanisms, rather than repair defective sleep and circadian regulation.

Funder

National Institutes of Health

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Physiology (medical),Neurology (clinical)

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