학술논문

Residual, differential neurobehavioral deficits linger after multiple recovery nights following chronic sleep restriction or acute total sleep deprivation
ORIGINAL ARTICLE
Document Type
Academic Journal
Source
SLEEP. April 2021, Vol. 44 Issue 4, p1n, 11 p.
Subject
Physiological aspects
Sleep deprivation -- Physiological aspects
Language
English
ISSN
0161-8105
Abstract
Introduction The average American receives at least 1 hour less than the recommended number of hours of sleep needed to achieve optimal levels of cognitive performance and wakefulness [1, 2]. [...]
Study Objectives: The amount of recovery sleep needed to fully restore well-established neurobehavioral deficits from sleep loss remains unknown, as does whether the recovery pattern differs across measures after total sleep deprivation (TSD) and chronic sleep restriction (SR). Methods: In total, 83 adults received two baseline nights (10-12-hour time in bed [TIB]) followed by five 4-hour TIB SR nights or 36-hour TSD and four recovery nights (R1-R4; 12-hour TIB). Neurobehavioral tests were completed every 2 hours during wakefulness and a Maintenance of Wakefulness Test measured physiological sleepiness. Polysomnography was collected on B2, R1, and R4 nights. Results: TSD and SR produced significant deficits in cognitive performance, increases in self-reported sleepiness and fatigue, decreases in vigor, and increases in physiological sleepiness. Neurobehavioral recovery from SR occurred after Rl and was maintained for all measures except Psychomotor Vigilance Test (PVT) lapses and response speed, which failed to completely recover. Neurobehavioral recovery from TSD occurred after R1 and was maintained for all cognitive and self-reported measures, except for vigor. After TSD and SR, Rl recovery sleep was longer and of higher efficiency and better quality than R4 recovery sleep. Conclusions: PVT impairments from SR failed to reverse completely; by contrast, vigor did not recover after TSD; all other deficits were reversed after sleep loss. These results suggest that TSD and SR induce sustained, differential biological, physiological, and/or neural changes, which remarkably are not reversed with chronic, long-duration recovery sleep. Our findings have critical implications for the population at large and for military and health professionals. Key words: sleepiness; vigor; fatigue; psychomotor vigilance test; cognitive; chronic sleep restriction; recovery; total sleep deprivation; MWT