Abstract

Insomnia, i.e., difficulties initiating and/or maintaining sleep, is one of the most common sleep disorders. To study underlying mechanisms for insomnia, we studied autonomic activity changes around sleep onset in participants without clinical insomnia but with varying problems with initiating or maintaining sleep quantified as increased sleep onset latency (SOL) and wake after sleep onset (WASO), respectively. Polysomnography and electrocardiography were simultaneously recorded in 176 participants during a single night. Cardiac autonomic activity was assessed using frequency domain analysis of RR intervals and results show that the normalized spectral power in the low frequency band (LFnu) after sleep onset was significantly higher in participants with long SOL compared to participants with short SOL. Furthermore, the normalized spectral power in the high frequency band (HFnu) was significantly lower in participants with long SOL as compared to participants with short SOL over 3 time periods (first 10 min in bed intending to sleep, 10 min before, and 10 min after sleep onset). These results suggest that participants with long SOL are more aroused in all three examined time periods when compared to participants with short SOL, especially for young adults (20–40 years). As there is no clear consensus on the cutoff for an increased WASO, we used a data-driven approach to explore different cutoffs to define short WASO and long WASO groups. LFnu, HFnu, and LF/HF differed between the long and the short WASO groups. A higher LFnu and LF/HF and a lower HFnu was observed in participants with long WASO for most cutoffs. The highest effect size was found using the cutoff of 66 min. Our findings suggest that autonomic cardiac activity has predictive value with respect to sleep characteristics pertaining to sleep onset and maintenance.

Highlights

  • Sleep has an important role in promoting health and many studies support a function of sleep in memory and cognitive processing

  • We used a Mann-Whitney U-test for all three variables and we found no significant differences in these parameters between the short and long sleep onset latency (SOL) groups

  • Even though Heart rate variability (HRV) measures are increasingly being used as a marker of cardiac autonomic activity during sleep, we are aware that HRV analysis has limitations especially regarding interpretation

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Sleep has an important role in promoting health and many studies support a function of sleep in memory and cognitive processing. In particular difficulties initiating and/or maintaining sleep are becoming more prevalent (Ohayon, 1997) and one third. HRV During Wake-to-Sleep Transition of the population worldwide is affected occasionally by insomnia symptoms (Ohayon, 1997; Nano et al, 2017). A clinical diagnosis of insomnia disorder requires presence of difficulties initiating and/or maintaining sleep with subsequent daytime impairments at least three nights per week and for at least 3 months. Insomnia disorder often involves medical and psychological comorbidities, making the understanding of underlying disrupted sleep mechanisms more challenging. Studying an earlier developmental stage of sleep disruption may provide new insights into these mechanisms

Objectives
Methods
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call