Lamond Nicole, Jay Sarah M, Dorrian Jillian, Ferguson Sally A, Jones Christopher, Dawson Drew
Centre for Sleep Research, University of South Australia, Adelaide, SA, Australia.
J Sleep Res. 2007 Mar;16(1):33-41. doi: 10.1111/j.1365-2869.2007.00574.x.
Rate of recovery of daytime performance and sleepiness following moderate and severe sleep deprivation (SD) was examined when recovery opportunity was either augmented or restricted. Thirty healthy non-smokers, aged 18-33 years, participated in one of three conditions: moderate SD with augmented (9-h) recovery opportunities, moderate SD with restricted (6-h) recovery opportunities, or severe SD with augmented recovery opportunities. Each participant attended the laboratory for 8-9 consecutive nights: an adaptation and baseline night (23:00-08:00 hours), one or two night(s) of wakefulness, and five consecutive recovery sleep opportunities (23:00-08:00 hours or 02:00-08:00 hours). On each experimental day, psychomotor vigilance performance (PVT) and subjective sleepiness (SSS) were assessed at two-hourly intervals, and MSLTs were performed at 1000 h. PSG data was collected for each sleep period. For all groups, PVT performance significantly deteriorated during the period of wakefulness, and sleepiness significantly increased. Significant differences were observed between the groups during the recovery phase. Following moderate SD, response speed, lapses and SSS returned to baseline after one 9-h sleep opportunity, while sleep latencies required two 9-h opportunities. When the recovery opportunity was restricted to six hours, neither PVT performance nor sleepiness recovered, but stabilised at below-baseline levels. Following severe SD, sleepiness recovered after one (SSS) or two (physiological) 9-h sleep opportunities, however PVT performance remained significantly below baseline for the entire recovery period. These results suggest that the mechanisms underlying the recovery process may be more complicated than previously thought, and that we may have underestimated the impact of sleep loss and/or the restorative value of subsequent sleep.
当恢复机会增加或受到限制时,研究了中度和重度睡眠剥夺(SD)后白天表现和嗜睡的恢复率。30名年龄在18 - 33岁的健康非吸烟者参与了以下三种情况之一:有增加(9小时)恢复机会的中度SD、有受限(6小时)恢复机会的中度SD或有增加恢复机会的重度SD。每位参与者连续8 - 9晚到实验室:一个适应和基线夜晚(23:00 - 08:00)、一个或两个清醒夜晚以及五个连续的恢复睡眠机会(23:00 - 08:00或02:00 - 08:00)。在每个实验日,每两小时评估一次心理运动警觉表现(PVT)和主观嗜睡(SSS),并在1000 h进行多次睡眠潜伏期试验(MSLT)。收集每个睡眠阶段的多导睡眠图(PSG)数据。对于所有组,在清醒期间PVT表现显著恶化,嗜睡显著增加。在恢复阶段观察到组间存在显著差异。中度SD后,经过一次9小时睡眠机会,反应速度、失误次数和SSS恢复到基线水平,而睡眠潜伏期需要两次9小时机会。当恢复机会限制为6小时时,PVT表现和嗜睡都没有恢复,而是稳定在低于基线的水平。重度SD后,经过一次(SSS)或两次(生理)9小时睡眠机会嗜睡恢复,然而在整个恢复期间PVT表现仍显著低于基线。这些结果表明,恢复过程的潜在机制可能比以前认为的更复杂,并且我们可能低估了睡眠不足的影响和/或后续睡眠的恢复价值。