Abstract

The discrepancies in the effects of napping on sleep quality may be due to differences in methodologies, napping behaviours, and daytime activity levels across studies. We determined whether napping behaviours and daytime activity levels are associated with night-time sleep fragmentation and sleep quality in young adults. A total of 62 healthy adults (mean [SD] age 23.5[4.2]years) completed screening questionnaires for sleep habits, physical activity, medical and psychological history. Actigraphy was used to record sleep including naps. The fragmentation algorithm (KRA ) was applied to the actigraphic data to measure night-time sleep fragmentation. We classified participants' nap frequency as "non-nappers" (0naps/8days), "moderate nappers" (1-2naps/8days) or "frequent nappers" (≥3naps/8days) naps. Nap duration was defined as "short" (≤60min) or "long" (>60min). Naps' proximity to the night sleep episode was defined as "early" (≥7h) and "late" (<7h) naps. Outcome variables were night-time KRA and actigraphic sleep variables. Frequent nappers had a significantly higher KRA than moderate nappers (p<0.01) and non-nappers (p<0.02). Late naps were associated with poorer measures of night sleep quality versus early naps (all p≤0.02). Nap duration and daytime activity were not associated with significant differences in the outcome variables (all p>0.05). KRA correlated with sleep duration, sleep efficiency, and awakenings (r=-0.32, -0.32, and 0.53, respectively; all p<0.05). Frequent napping and late naps may be associated with increased sleep fragmentation and poorer sleep quality, reflected in longer sleep onsets and increased awakenings. These findings have implications for public health sleep hygiene recommendations.

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