Hein Emil, Halonen Risto, Wolbers Thomas, Makkonen Tommi, Kyllönen Markus, Kuula Liisa, Kurki Ilmari, Stepnicka Philipp, Pesonen Anu-Katriina
SleepWell Research Program, Faculty of Medicine, University of Helsinki, Helsinki, Finland.
Department of Psychology and Logopedics, Faculty of Medicine, University of Helsinki, Helsinki, Finland.
Neurobiol Stress. 2024 Feb 4;29:100613. doi: 10.1016/j.ynstr.2024.100613. eCollection 2024 Mar.
Evidence of the impact of chronic stress on sleep is abundant, yet experimental sleep studies with a focus on acute stress are scarce and the results are mixed. Our study aimed to fill this gap by experimentally investigating the effects of pre-sleep social stress on sleep dynamics during the subsequent night, as measured with polysomnography (PSG).
Thirty-four healthy individuals (65% females, M = 25.76 years SD = 3.35) underwent a stress-inducing (SC) or neutral control condition (CC) in virtual reality (VR). We used overnight EEG measurements to analyze the basic sleep parameters and power spectral density (PSD) across the sleep cycles, and measured heart rate and its variability (HRV), skin electrodermal activity (EDA), and salivary cortisol to capture physiological arousal during the VR task and the pre-sleep period.
Following acute stress (SC), the amount of slow-wave sleep (SWS) was higher and N2 sleep lower relative to CC, specifically in the first sleep cycle. In SC, PSD was elevated in the beta-low (16-24 Hz) and beta-high (25-35 Hz) frequency ranges during both stages N2 and SWS over the entire night.
Sleep promoted adaptation to acute social stress by a longer duration of SWS in the subsequent sleep period, especially in early sleep. A similar homeostatic effect towards restorative sleep is well-evidenced in animal model stress studies but has not been previously reported in experimental human studies. Whether the high-frequency PSD activity during stages N2 and SWS also serves in the resolution of transient stress, remains open.
慢性应激对睡眠影响的证据丰富,但聚焦于急性应激的实验性睡眠研究较少且结果不一。我们的研究旨在通过实验研究睡前社交应激对随后夜间睡眠动态的影响(通过多导睡眠图(PSG)测量)来填补这一空白。
34名健康个体(65%为女性,平均年龄M = 25.76岁,标准差SD = 3.35)在虚拟现实(VR)环境中接受应激诱导(SC)或中性对照条件(CC)。我们使用夜间脑电图测量来分析整个睡眠周期的基本睡眠参数和功率谱密度(PSD),并测量心率及其变异性(HRV)、皮肤电活动(EDA)和唾液皮质醇,以捕捉VR任务和睡前期间的生理唤醒情况。
与CC相比,急性应激(SC)后,慢波睡眠(SWS)量更高,N2睡眠更低,特别是在第一个睡眠周期。在SC组中,整个夜间N2和SWS阶段的β低频(16 - 24 Hz)和β高频(25 - 35 Hz)频率范围内的PSD均升高。
睡眠通过在随后睡眠期,特别是在早期睡眠中延长SWS持续时间,促进对急性社交应激的适应。在动物模型应激研究中,对恢复性睡眠有类似的稳态效应已有充分证据,但此前在实验性人体研究中尚未报道。N2和SWS阶段的高频PSD活动是否也有助于解决短暂应激,仍未明确。