Affiliation:
1. Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, University of California Davis , Sacramento, CA , USA
2. Department of Psychology, Arizona State University , Tempe, AZ , USA
Abstract
Abstract
Study Objectives
Limiting spindle activity via sleep restriction could explain some of the negative cognitive effects of sleep loss in adolescents. The current study evaluates how sleep restriction affects sleep spindle number, incidence, amplitude, duration, and wave frequency and tests whether sleep restriction effects on spindles change across the years of adolescence. The study determines whether sleep restriction effects on daytime sleepiness, vigilance, and cognition are related to changes in sleep spindles.
Methods
In each year of this 3-year longitudinal study, 77 participants, ranging in age from 10 to 16 years, each completed three different time in bed (TIB) schedules: 7, 8.5, or 10 hours in bed for 4 consecutive nights. A computer algorithm detected and analyzed sleep spindles in night four central and frontal electroencephalogram. Objective and self-reported daytime sleepiness and cognition were evaluated on the day following the 4th night.
Results
For 7 versus 10 hours TIB average all-night frontal and central spindle counts were reduced by 35% and 32%, respectively. Reducing TIB also significantly decreased spindle incidence in the first 5 hours of non-rapid eye movement sleep, produced small but significant reductions in spindle amplitude, and had little to no effect on spindle duration and spindle wave frequency. Sleep restriction effects did not change with age. The reductions in spindle count and incidence were related to daytime sleepiness on the following day but were not related to working memory.
Conclusions
The sleep loss effects on daytime functioning in adolescents are partially mediated by reduced sleep spindles impacting daytime sleepiness.
Funder
National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute
National Institutes of Health
Publisher
Oxford University Press (OUP)
Subject
Physiology (medical),Neurology (clinical)
Cited by
2 articles.
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