The effect of wind turbine noise on polysomnographically measured and self-reported sleep latency in wind turbine noise naïve participants

Author:

Liebich Tessa12ORCID,Lack Leon2,Micic Gorica2,Hansen Kristy3ORCID,Zajamšek Branko2ORCID,Dunbar Claire12,Lechat Bastien2ORCID,Scott Hannah2ORCID,Lovato Nicole2ORCID,Decup Felix3,Nguyen Duc Phuc3,Catcheside Peter2ORCID

Affiliation:

1. College of Education, Psychology and Social Work, Flinders University, Adelaide, Australia

2. Flinders Health and Medical Research Institute for Sleep, Adelaide Institute for Sleep Health, College of Medicine and Public Health, Flinders University, Adelaide, Australia

3. College of Science and Engineering, Flinders University, Adelaide, Australia

Abstract

Abstract Study Objectives Wind turbine noise (WTN) exposure could potentially interfere with the initiation of sleep. However, effects on objectively assessed sleep latency are largely unknown. This study sought to assess the impact of WTN on polysomnographically measured and sleep diary-determined sleep latency compared to control background noise alone in healthy good sleepers without habitual prior WTN exposure. Methods Twenty-three WTN naïve urban residents (mean ± SD age: 21.7 ± 2.1 years, range 18–29, 13 females) attended the sleep laboratory for two polysomnography studies, one week apart. Participants were blind to noise conditions and only informed that they may or may not hear noise during each night. During the sleep onset period, participants were exposed to counterbalanced nights of WTN at 33 dB(A), the upper end of expected indoor values; or background noise alone as the control condition (23 dB(A)). Results Linear mixed model analysis revealed no differences in log10 normalized objective or subjective sleep latency between the WTN versus control nights (median [interquartile range] objective 16.5 [11.0 to 18.5] vs. 16.5 [10.5 to 29.0] min, p = .401; subjective 20.0 [15.0 to 25.0] vs. 15.0 [10.0 to 30.0] min, p = .907). Conclusions Although undetected small effects cannot be ruled out, these results do not support that WTN extends sleep latency in young urban-dwelling individuals without prior WTN exposure.

Funder

National Health and Medical Research Council

Australian Research Council

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Physiology (medical),Neurology (clinical)

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