Abstract

Many people consume coffee to attenuate increased sleepiness and impaired vigilance and attention due to insufficient sleep. We investigated in genetically caffeine sensitive men and women whether ‘real world’ coffee consumption during a simulated busy work week counteracts disabling consequences of chronically restricted sleep. We subjected homozygous C-allele carriers of ADORA2A (gene encoding adenosine A2A receptors) to five nights of only 5 h time-in-bed. We administered regular coffee (n = 12; 200 mg caffeine at breakfast and 100 mg caffeine after lunch) and decaffeinated coffee (n = 14) in double-blind fashion on all days following sleep restriction. At regular intervals four times each day, participants rated their sleepiness and performed the psychomotor vigilance test, the visual search task, and the visuo-spatial and letter n-back tasks. At bedtime, we quantified caffeine and the major caffeine metabolites paraxanthine, theobromine and theophylline in saliva. The two groups did not differ in age, body-mass-index, sex-ratio, chronotype and mood states. Subjective sleepiness increased in both groups across consecutive sleep restriction days and did not differ. By contrast, regular coffee counteracted the impact of repeated sleep loss on sustained and selective attention, as well as executive control when compared to decaffeinated coffee. The coffee also induced initial or transient benefits on different aspects of baseline performance during insufficient sleep. All differences between the groups disappeared after the recovery night and the cessation of coffee administration. The data suggest that ‘real world’ coffee consumption can efficiently attenuate sleep restriction-induced impairments in vigilance and attention in genetically caffeine sensitive individuals.German Clinical Trial Registry: # DRSK00014379.

Highlights

  • Undisturbed sleep of sufficient duration is a prerequisite for personal well-being and health and is essential for alertness and cognitive performance necessary for safe and effective functioning

  • The mean Karolinska Sleepiness Scale (KSS) rating was slightly attenuated on sleep restriction day 1 after regular coffee administration and appeared to rise less steeply in the regular coffee group when compared to the decaffeinated coffee group (‘day’ x ‘group’ interaction: F6,672 = 3.64, p = 0.001), no significant difference between the groups was detected on any day of the experimental protocol

  • We addressed the question whether the prevalent habit of drinking morning and midday coffee and ingesting roughly 300 mg caffeine per day ensures optimal attention during chronic sleep restriction

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Summary

Introduction

Undisturbed sleep of sufficient duration is a prerequisite for personal well-being and health and is essential for alertness and cognitive performance necessary for safe and effective functioning. Genetic variants of the adenosine A2A receptor gene (ADORA2A), in particular the c.1976T>C variant, were consistently found to modulate neurobehavioral performance during sleep restriction (Bodenmann et al, 2012; Rupp et al, 2013), as well as individual effects of caffeine on selfreported alertness (Rogers et al, 2010), attention network functions (Renda et al, 2015; Geiger et al, 2016) and sleep (Retey et al, 2007; Bodenmann et al, 2012) These findings suggest that prospective genotyping of the c.1976T>C variant of ADORA2A could provide clearer outcomes on the potential usefulness of coffee as a countermeasure against impaired attention due to insufficient sleep. We hypothesized that daily coffee consumption in genetically caffeine sensitive individuals attenuates sleepiness and the impairment of performance on all attentional domains during a five-day simulated busy workweek of only 5 h time-in-bed each night

Materials and methods
Participants
Coffee preparation and administration
Subjective sleepiness
Testing attention network functions
Quantification of caffeine and caffeine metabolites in saliva
Data analyses
Results
Discussion
Full Text
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