Abstract

Acquisition and reacquisition of skills is a main pillar of functional recovery after stroke. Nighttime sleep has a positive influence on motor learning in healthy individuals, whereas the effect of daytime sleep on neuro-rehabilitative training and relearning of the trained skills is often neglected. The aim of this study was to investigate the relationship between daytime sleep (napping) and the ability to learn a new visuomotor task in chronic stroke patients. The main hypothesis was that sleep enhances motor memory consolidation after training resulting in better motor performance after a period of daytime sleep. Thirty stroke survivors completed the study. They were randomized to one of three different conditions (i) wakeful resting, (ii) short nap (10–20 min), or (iii) long nap (50–80 min). All individuals trained the task with the contralesional, stroke-impaired hand, behavioral evaluation was performed after the break time (wake, nap), and 24 h later. Patients demonstrated a significant task-related behavioral improvement throughout the training. In contrast to the main hypothesis, there was no evidence for sleep-dependent motor consolidation early after the initial, diurnal break, or after an additional full night of sleep. In a secondary analysis, the performance changes of stroke survivors were compared with those of a group of healthy older adults who performed the identical task within the same experimental setup with their non-dominant hand. Performance levels were comparable between both cohorts at all time points. Stroke-related difficulties in motor control did not impact on the degree of performance improvement through training and daytime sleep did not impact on the behavioral gains in the two groups. In summary, the current study indicates that one-time daytime sleep after motor training does not influence behavioral gains.

Highlights

  • Stroke is one of the main causes of acquired disability in adulthood [1]

  • The overarching aim of the present study is to provide a more in-depth understanding of performance and consolidation in a visuomotor adaptation task in individuals after stroke and the influence of daytime napping

  • This study compared the role of daytime napping in a visuomotor adaptation task in chronic stroke survivors and healthy older adults

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Summary

Introduction

Stroke is one of the main causes of acquired disability in adulthood [1]. Individuals and their caregivers are confronted with deficits affecting multiple domains of daily life. Individual rehabilitation success is to a relevant degree dependent on re-learning of motor skills. Some sleep-studies point to a performance-enhancing effect in younger and older adults [6,7,8,9,10,11,12,13,14,15] while others do not [12, 16,17,18,19,20,21,22]. Well-recovered individuals after stroke, who practice a sequence task show performanceenhancing effects of a night of sleep [21, 22]. Support that naps might facilitate the effects of motor learning in healthy young adults has been well documented [26,27,28,29,30,31]. Comparable studies in individuals after stroke are lacking, but less disturbed sleep seems to be associated with better recovery [33]

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