Walsh James K, Randazzo Angela C, Stone Kara, Eisenstein Rhody, Feren Stephen D, Kajy Susan, Dickey Pam, Roehrs Timothy, Roth Thomas, Schweitzer Paula K
Sleep Medicine and Research Center, St. John's Mercy Medical Center/St. Luke's Hospital, St. Louis, MO, USA.
Sleep. 2006 Apr;29(4):433-43.
To evaluate the impact of enhanced slow-wave sleep (SWS) on behavioral, psychological, and physiologic changes resulting from sleep restriction
A double-blind, parallel-group, placebo-controlled design was used to compare tiagabine, 8 mg, (a SWS-enhancing drug) to placebo during 4 nights of sleep restriction (time in bed = 5 hours per night). Behavioral, psychological, and physiologic measures of the impact of sleep restriction were compared between groups at baseline, during sleep restriction, and following recovery sleep.
Two sleep research laboratories.
Thirty-eight healthy adults; 9 men and 10 women (mean age: 26.0 +/- 6.1 years) in the placebo group and 8 men and 11 women (mean age: 26.7 +/- 8.1 years) in the tiagabine 8 mg group
Both experimental groups underwent 4 nights of sleep restriction. Each group received either tiagabine 8 mg or placebo on all sleep-restriction nights, and both groups received placebo on baseline and recovery nights.
Polysomnography documented a SWS-enhancing effect of tiagabine. The placebo group displayed the predicted deficits due to sleep restriction on the Psychomotor Vigilance Task and the Multiple Sleep Latency Test. Compared with placebo, the tiagabine group did not demonstrate impairment in sustained attention on the Psychomotor Vigilance Test, performed better on the Wisconsin Card Sorting Task, reported more restorative sleep, and had less of an increase in afternoon-evening salivary free cortisol. Multiple Sleep Latency Test, ratings of sleepiness, recovery sleep, and other measures did not differ between groups.
To our knowledge these findings are the first to be consistent with the hypothesis that pharmacologic SWS enhancement reduces selective aspects of the behavioral, psychological, and physiologic impact of sleep restriction.
评估增强慢波睡眠(SWS)对睡眠限制所导致的行为、心理和生理变化的影响
采用双盲、平行组、安慰剂对照设计,在4晚睡眠限制期间(卧床时间 = 每晚5小时),将8毫克替加宾(一种增强SWS的药物)与安慰剂进行比较。在基线期、睡眠限制期间和恢复睡眠后,比较两组睡眠限制影响的行为、心理和生理指标。
两个睡眠研究实验室
38名健康成年人;安慰剂组9名男性和10名女性(平均年龄:26.0±6.1岁),8毫克替加宾组8名男性和11名女性(平均年龄:26.7±8.1岁)
两个实验组均经历4晚睡眠限制。每组在所有睡眠限制夜间接受8毫克替加宾或安慰剂,两组在基线期和恢复夜间接受安慰剂。
多导睡眠图记录了替加宾增强SWS的作用。安慰剂组在心理运动警觉任务和多次睡眠潜伏期测试中表现出因睡眠限制导致的预期缺陷。与安慰剂相比,替加宾组在心理运动警觉测试中持续注意力未受损,在威斯康星卡片分类任务中表现更好,报告有更多恢复性睡眠,且下午至晚上唾液游离皮质醇增加较少。两组在多次睡眠潜伏期测试、嗜睡评分、恢复睡眠及其他指标上无差异。
据我们所知,这些发现首次与以下假设一致,即药物增强SWS可减轻睡眠限制在行为、心理和生理方面的选择性影响。