Sleep Deprivation Clinical Trial
Official title:
Benefits of Sleep Extension on Cognitive and Physical Performances During Baseline, Total Sleep Deprivation and Recovery (BankingSleep)
Objectives: investigate the effects of 6 nights of sleep extension on physical and cognitive
performances before, during total sleep deprivation (39 hours continuous awaking) and after
a subsequent recovery sleep.
Design: Subjects participated in two experimental conditions (randomized cross-over design):
extended sleep (10-h in bed, EXT) and habitual sleep (8-h in bed, HAB). In each condition,
subjects performed two consecutive phases: (1) six nights of either EXT or HAB (2) three
experiments days in-laboratory:baseline (BASE), sleep deprivation (TSD) and after 10 h of
recovery sleep(REC). Performance tests were administered every 3 hours over the 3-d in
laboratory.
Setting: This cross-over and randomized study was conducted under standardized laboratory
conditions with continuous polysomnographic recording Participants: 14 healthy men (age
range: 26-37 years) participated in the study.
Interventions: EXT vs. HAB sleep durations prior to total sleep deprivation (39 hr
continuous awaking).
Many human endeavors require high-level cognitive performance situations (e.g., health care,
military operations, space flight) along the whole nycthemera (i.e. the 24-h cycle).
It has long been established that both acute total sleep deprivation (TSD) and chronic sleep
restriction impair ability to maintain wakefulness, increase subjective sleepiness and sleep
propensity, and most critically reduce various aspects of cognitive performance. In studies
conducted in both laboratory setting and different professional situations inducing
insufficient sleep, the most consistently and dramatically impacted cognitive capacities
were sustained attention and alertness. This degradation of cognitive performance after a
period of sleep deprivation is linked to an increase of sleep pressure, e.g. a reduction in
the latency to sleep onset or increase of number of involuntary micro sleeps.
To identify countermeasures to deleterious effects of sleep deprivation is critical in many
professional areas.
Management of wake/sleep cycle appears to have an important impact of alertness during sleep
deprivation (e.g. sleep habits or physical activity, see the review. Recently, Rupp and
coll. (2012) reported that one week of sleep extension realized before one week of sleep
restriction (3 h/night) influence the rate of degradation of cognitive performance and
alertness during this period and the subsequent recovery period. In other words, they
proposed that sleep can be "banked" before a period of sleep loss and may help sustain
performance and alertness. With a different experimental paradigm (i.e. without subsequent
sleep deprivation), studies have shown that sleep extension (realized over different periods
of time) may improve physical performance, attentional performance, or mood. The fact of
increasing total sleep time over a period of time represents an attractive
non-pharmacological countermeasure to limit the deleterious effects on performance induced
by sleep privation. However, there is no study with cross-over and randomized design to
assess effect on relatively short period (6 nights) of sleep extension on performance
before, during total sleep deprivation and recovery. Moreover, there is no direct
measurement of sleep pressure as continuous EEG monitoring to quantify micro sleep episode
during period of sleep deprivation and effect of sleep extension on physical performance is
not known.
Hence, the aim of this study was to assess the effects of 6 nights of sleep extension (EXT)
on physical and cognitive performances, alertness and homeostatic sleep pressure before,
during total sleep deprivation and the subsequent recovery day.
The investigators hypothesized that EXT would: i) partly prevents the physical and cognitive
performances degradation-induced by total sleep deprivation ii) decreases the sleep pressure
before, during and after total sleep deprivation and iii) improves the recovery speed of
physical and cognitive performances.
;
Allocation: Randomized, Intervention Model: Crossover Assignment, Masking: Open Label, Primary Purpose: Treatment
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