Ackermann Sandra, Cordi Maren, La Marca Roberto, Seifritz Erich, Rasch Björn
Division of Cognitive Biopsychology and Methods, Department of Psychology, University of Fribourg, Fribourg, Switzerland.
Sleep & Health Zürich, University of Zurich, Zurich, Switzerland.
Front Psychol. 2019 Jan 25;10:20. doi: 10.3389/fpsyg.2019.00020. eCollection 2019.
Sleep disturbances are an important risk factor for stress-related diseases such as burnout or depression. In particular, slow-wave activity (SWA) during sleep might be eminently relevant for optimal maintenance of mental health and cognitive functioning. In spite of the clinical importance and the pertinence of stress-related processes in everyday life, the physiological mechanisms of the association between stress, sleep, and cognition are not well-understood. In the present study, we carefully mapped the time course of the influence of a psychosocial stressor on sleep architecture and sleep-related oscillations during a midday nap. We induced stress using a psychosocial laboratory stressor, the Montreal Imaging Stress Task, vs. a neutral control task. Afterward, participants were allowed to take a 90-min nap ( = 20) or stayed awake ( = 19) and cortisol was measured via saliva samples. We hypothesized that stress would decrease sleep efficiency and SWA in a time-dependent manner, with impairing effects on cognitive functioning. Psychosocial stress resulted in increased cortisol levels, which were elevated throughout the study interval. In the nap group, psychosocial stress increased sleep latency, but had only minor effects on sleep architecture. Still, SWA in the first 30 min of sleep was significantly reduced, whereas alpha activity was enhanced. These effects vanished after approximately 30 min. No impairing effect on cognitive functioning occurred. Our results show that psychosocial stress before sleep has an impact on sleep latency and early SWA during sleep. In contrast to our hypothesis, the effects were rather small and short-lasting. Importantly, cognitive functioning was maintained. We conclude that the effects of psychosocial stress before a nap are possibly better compensated than previously believed.
睡眠障碍是诸如职业倦怠或抑郁症等与压力相关疾病的重要风险因素。特别是,睡眠期间的慢波活动(SWA)可能与心理健康和认知功能的最佳维持密切相关。尽管在日常生活中与压力相关的过程具有临床重要性和相关性,但压力、睡眠和认知之间关联的生理机制尚未得到充分理解。在本研究中,我们仔细描绘了心理社会应激源对午睡期间睡眠结构和睡眠相关振荡影响的时间进程。我们使用心理社会实验室应激源(蒙特利尔成像应激任务)与中性对照任务来诱发压力。之后,参与者被允许进行90分钟的午睡(n = 20)或保持清醒(n = 19),并通过唾液样本测量皮质醇。我们假设压力会以时间依赖的方式降低睡眠效率和SWA,对认知功能产生损害作用。心理社会压力导致皮质醇水平升高,在整个研究期间都保持在较高水平。在午睡组中,心理社会压力增加了睡眠潜伏期,但对睡眠结构的影响较小。不过,睡眠前30分钟的SWA显著降低,而α活动增强。这些影响在大约30分钟后消失。对认知功能没有产生损害作用。我们的结果表明,睡前的心理社会压力会影响睡眠潜伏期和睡眠期间的早期SWA。与我们的假设相反,这些影响相当小且持续时间短。重要的是,认知功能得以维持。我们得出结论,午睡前心理社会压力的影响可能比之前认为的更容易得到补偿。