Home > Publications database > Reestablishment of individual sleep structure during a single 14-h recovery sleep episode after 58 h of wakefulness |
Journal Article | FZJ-2018-05400 |
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2019
Wiley-Blackwell
Oxford [u.a.]
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Please use a persistent id in citations: http://hdl.handle.net/2128/22229 doi:10.1111/jsr.12641
Abstract: Sleep structure is highly stable within individuals but different between individuals. The present study investigated robustness of the individual sleep structure to extended total sleep deprivation. Seventeen healthy men spent a baseline night (23:00-07:00 hours), 58 h of sleep deprivation and a 14-h recovery night (17:00-07:00 hours) in the laboratory. Intraclass correlation coefficients showed that the agreement between baseline and recovery with respect to the proportion of the different sleep stages increased as a function of recovery sleep duration. High values were reached for most of the sleep stages at the end of 14 h of recovery sleep (intraclass correlation coefficients between 0.38 and 0.76). If sleep duration of the recovery night is extended to 14 h, sleep stage distribution resembles that of a baseline night underlining the robustness of the individual sleep structure.
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