Shirota Ai, Kamimura Mayo, Katagiri Ayano, Taniike Masako, Kato Takafumi
Department of Oral Physiology, Osaka University Graduate School of Dentistry, Suita, Japan.
Department of Child Development, United Graduate School of Medicine, Osaka University, Suita, Japan.
Sleep Biol Rhythms. 2022 Dec 17;21(2):211-219. doi: 10.1007/s41105-022-00437-x. eCollection 2023 Apr.
This study examined whether subjective and objective sleep parameters (sleep stage, electroencephalography [EEG] power, heart rate variability) are related to the progression of sleep cycles using differences in the variables between two nights. We hypothesized that the association between night-to-night differences between subjective and objective sleep variables reflect the difference in objective sleep variables in the first sleep cycle. Seventy-seven healthy adults (23.8 ± 2.2 years; 41 females) participated in polysomnographic recordings on two consecutive nights. To extract the variables that represent the difference between the nights, the sleep parameters of Night 1 were subtracted from those of Night 2. Spearman's rho was used to assess correlations between subjective sleep assessments and objective sleep parameters, with false discovery rate correction for multiple comparisons. Subjective sleep assessments were significantly correlated with whole-night sleep architecture and quantitative EEG activity, but not with heart rate variability during the night. Among sleep cycles, subjective sleep parameters were correlated with the objective sleep parameters in the first sleep cycle ("Ease of falling asleep" vs. waking after sleep onset [ = - 0.382], "Depth of sleep" vs. EEG theta power [ = 0.404], "Quality of sleep" vs. the percentage of stage N3 [ = 0.412] and EEG delta power [ = 0.458], all < 0.05). These results suggest the importance of taking the difference among the nights into account when assessing subjective sleep quality. This study clarified that sleep in the first sleep cycle has a dominant influence on subjective sleep assessments.
The online version contains supplementary material available at 10.1007/s41105-022-00437-x.
本研究通过两晚之间变量的差异,检验主观和客观睡眠参数(睡眠阶段、脑电图[EEG]功率、心率变异性)是否与睡眠周期的进展相关。我们假设主观和客观睡眠变量的夜间差异之间的关联反映了第一个睡眠周期中客观睡眠变量的差异。77名健康成年人(23.8±2.2岁;41名女性)连续两晚参加了多导睡眠图记录。为了提取代表两晚之间差异的变量,用第二晚的睡眠参数减去第一晚的睡眠参数。使用斯皮尔曼等级相关系数来评估主观睡眠评估与客观睡眠参数之间的相关性,并对多重比较进行错误发现率校正。主观睡眠评估与整夜睡眠结构和定量脑电图活动显著相关,但与夜间心率变异性无关。在各个睡眠周期中,主观睡眠参数与第一个睡眠周期中的客观睡眠参数相关(“入睡难易程度”与睡眠开始后醒来[=-0.382]、“睡眠深度”与脑电图θ波功率[=0.404]、“睡眠质量”与N3期百分比[=0.412]和脑电图δ波功率[=0.458],均<0.05)。这些结果表明,在评估主观睡眠质量时考虑夜间差异的重要性。本研究阐明了第一个睡眠周期中的睡眠对主观睡眠评估具有主要影响。
在线版本包含可在10.1007/s41105-022-00437-x获取的补充材料。