Van Dongen Hans P A, Maislin Greg, Mullington Janet M, Dinges David F
Unit for Experimental Psychiatry, Division of Sleep and Chronobiology, Department of Psychiatry, and Centerfor Sleep and Respiratory Neurobiology, University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine, Philadelphia 19104-6021, USA.
Sleep. 2003 Mar 15;26(2):117-26. doi: 10.1093/sleep/26.2.117.
To inform the debate over whether human sleep can be chronically reduced without consequences, we conducted a dose-response chronic sleep restriction experiment in which waking neurobehavioral and sleep physiological functions were monitored and compared to those for total sleep deprivation.
The chronic sleep restriction experiment involved randomization to one of three sleep doses (4 h, 6 h, or 8 h time in bed per night), which were maintained for 14 consecutive days. The total sleep deprivation experiment involved 3 nights without sleep (0 h time in bed). Each study also involved 3 baseline (pre-deprivation) days and 3 recovery days.
Both experiments were conducted under standardized laboratory conditions with continuous behavioral, physiological and medical monitoring.
A total of n = 48 healthy adults (ages 21-38) participated in the experiments.
Noctumal sleep periods were restricted to 8 h, 6 h or 4 h per day for 14 days, or to 0 h for 3 days. All other sleep was prohibited.
Chronic restriction of sleep periods to 4 h or 6 h per night over 14 consecutive days resulted in significant cumulative, dose-dependent deficits in cognitive performance on all tasks. Subjective sleepiness ratings showed an acute response to sleep restriction but only small further increases on subsequent days, and did not significantly differentiate the 6 h and 4 h conditions. Polysomnographic variables and delta power in the non-REM sleep EEG-a putative marker of sleep homeostasis--displayed an acute response to sleep restriction with negligible further changes across the 14 restricted nights. Comparison of chronic sleep restriction to total sleep deprivation showed that the latter resulted in disproportionately large waking neurobehavioral and sleep delta power responses relative to how much sleep was lost. A statistical model revealed that, regardless of the mode of sleep deprivation, lapses in behavioral alertness were near-linearly related to the cumulative duration of wakefulness in excess of 15.84 h (s.e. 0.73 h).
Since chronic restriction of sleep to 6 h or less per night produced cognitive performance deficits equivalent to up to 2 nights of total sleep deprivation, it appears that even relatively moderate sleep restriction can seriously impair waking neurobehavioral functions in healthy adults. Sleepiness ratings suggest that subjects were largely unaware of these increasing cognitive deficits, which may explain why the impact of chronic sleep restriction on waking cognitive functions is often assumed to be benign. Physiological sleep responses to chronic restriction did not mirror waking neurobehavioral responses, but cumulative wakefulness in excess of a 15.84 h predicted performance lapses across all four experimental conditions. This suggests that sleep debt is perhaps best understood as resulting in additional wakefulness that has a neurobiological "cost" which accumulates over time.
为了给关于人类睡眠能否长期减少而无不良后果的辩论提供信息,我们进行了一项剂量反应性慢性睡眠限制实验,在此实验中监测清醒时的神经行为和睡眠生理功能,并与完全睡眠剥夺时的这些功能进行比较。
慢性睡眠限制实验涉及随机分配到三种睡眠剂量之一(每晚卧床4小时、6小时或8小时),并连续维持14天。完全睡眠剥夺实验包括3个不眠之夜(卧床0小时)。每项研究还包括3个基线(剥夺前)日和3个恢复日。
两项实验均在标准化实验室条件下进行,持续进行行为、生理和医学监测。
共有n = 48名健康成年人(年龄21 - 38岁)参与了实验。
夜间睡眠时间被限制为每天8小时、6小时或4小时,持续14天,或限制为0小时,持续3天。禁止所有其他睡眠。
连续14天将睡眠时间慢性限制为每晚4小时或6小时,导致所有任务的认知表现出现显著的累积性、剂量依赖性缺陷。主观嗜睡评分显示对睡眠限制有急性反应,但在随后几天仅略有进一步增加,并且没有显著区分6小时和4小时的情况。多导睡眠图变量和非快速眼动睡眠脑电图中的δ波功率——睡眠稳态的一个假定标志物——对睡眠限制有急性反应,在14个受限夜晚中进一步变化可忽略不计。慢性睡眠限制与完全睡眠剥夺的比较表明,相对于失去的睡眠时间,后者导致清醒时的神经行为和睡眠δ波功率反应不成比例地大幅增加。一个统计模型显示,无论睡眠剥夺的方式如何,行为警觉性的失误与超过15.84小时(标准误0.73小时)的累积清醒持续时间近乎线性相关。
由于连续14天将睡眠时间慢性限制为每晚6小时或更少会产生与多达2晚完全睡眠剥夺相当的认知表现缺陷,看来即使是相对适度的睡眠限制也会严重损害健康成年人清醒时的神经行为功能。嗜睡评分表明受试者在很大程度上没有意识到这些不断增加的认知缺陷,这可能解释了为什么慢性睡眠限制对清醒认知功能的影响常常被认为是无害的。对慢性限制的生理睡眠反应并未反映清醒时的神经行为反应,但超过15.84小时的累积清醒时间预测了所有四种实验条件下的表现失误。这表明睡眠债或许最好被理解为导致额外的清醒,而这种清醒具有随着时间积累的神经生物学“成本”。