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睡眠中增强的身体热量传导损失会增加慢波睡眠并使心脏平静。

Enhanced conductive body heat loss during sleep increases slow-wave sleep and calms the heart.

机构信息

Interdisciplinary Center of Sleep Medicine, Charité - Universitätsmedizin Berlin, Berlin, Germany.

Sleep Disorder Center, Department of Neurosciences, University of Torino, AOU Città della Salute e della Scienza, Torino, Italy.

出版信息

Sci Rep. 2024 Feb 26;14(1):4669. doi: 10.1038/s41598-024-53839-x.

Abstract

Substantial evidence suggests that the circadian decline of core body temperature (CBT) triggers the initiation of human sleep, with CBT continuing to decrease during sleep. Although the connection between habitual sleep and CBT patterns is established, the impact of external body cooling on sleep remains poorly understood. The main aim of the present study is to show whether a decline in body temperatures during sleep can be related to an increase in slow wave sleep (N3). This three-center study on 72 individuals of varying age, sex, and BMI used an identical type of a high-heat capacity mattress as a reproducible, non-disturbing way of body cooling, accompanied by measurements of CBT and proximal back skin temperatures, heart rate and sleep (polysomnography). The main findings were an increase in nocturnal sleep stage N3 (7.5 ± 21.6 min/7.5 h, mean ± SD; p = 0.0038) and a decrease in heart rate (- 2.36 ± 1.08 bpm, mean ± SD; p < 0.0001); sleep stage REM did not change (p = 0.3564). Subjects with a greater degree of body cooling exhibited a significant increase in nocturnal N3 and a decrease in REM sleep, mainly in the second part of the night. In addition, these subjects showed a phase advance in the NREM-REM sleep cycle distribution of N3 and REM. Both effects were significantly associated with increased conductive inner heat transfer, indicated by an increased CBT- proximal back skin temperature -gradient, rather than with changes in CBT itself. Our findings reveal a previously far disregarded mechanism in sleep research that has potential therapeutic implications: Conductive body cooling during sleep is a reliable method for promoting N3 and reducing heart rate.

摘要

大量证据表明,核心体温(CBT)的昼夜下降触发了人类睡眠的开始,而在睡眠期间 CBT 继续下降。尽管已经确定了习惯性睡眠和 CBT 模式之间的联系,但对外界身体冷却对睡眠的影响仍知之甚少。本研究的主要目的是展示睡眠期间体温下降是否与慢波睡眠(N3)增加有关。这项涉及 72 名不同年龄、性别和 BMI 的个体的三中心研究使用了一种相同类型的高热容量床垫,作为一种可复制、不干扰的身体冷却方式,同时测量 CBT 和近端背部皮肤温度、心率和睡眠(多导睡眠图)。主要发现是夜间睡眠阶段 N3 增加(7.5±21.6 分钟/7.5 小时,平均值±标准差;p=0.0038)和心率下降(-2.36±1.08 bpm,平均值±标准差;p<0.0001);REM 睡眠阶段没有变化(p=0.3564)。身体冷却程度较大的受试者夜间 N3 显著增加,REM 睡眠减少,主要发生在夜间的后半段。此外,这些受试者的 NREM-REM 睡眠周期分布中的 N3 和 REM 出现相位提前。这两种效应都与传导内热传递的增加显著相关,这表现为 CBT-近端背部皮肤温度梯度的增加,而不是 CBT 本身的变化。我们的研究结果揭示了睡眠研究中一个以前被忽视的机制,这可能具有治疗意义:睡眠期间的传导性身体冷却,是促进 N3 和降低心率的可靠方法。

https://cdn.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/blobs/f43a/10897321/d4985efe6791/41598_2024_53839_Fig1_HTML.jpg

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