Abstract

This study was carried out in order to further test the hypothesis that the occurrence of REM sleep in the rat in the form of episodes separated by long intervals ( single REM sleep episodes) and by short intervals ( sequential REM sleep episodes) is differently influenced by changes in both sleep and ambient related processes. Rats were studied during the exposure to Ta −10°C for 24 or 48 h and during a 12 h recovery period at laboratory Ta (23°C) following either the first or the second 24 h of cold exposure. The exposure to such a low Ta induced an almost complete abolition of REM sleep which was followed, during recovery, by a marked REM sleep rebound. However, in spite of the larger REM sleep deprivation, the REM sleep rebound was weaker following the 48 h-exposure than that following the exposure for 24 h. The increase in the amount of REM sleep during the recovery period was due to an increase in the amount of that occurring in the form of sequential episodes, whilst that in the form of single episodes did not change with respect to control levels. However, the occurrence of REM sleep in the form of sequential episodes was partially impaired during the REM sleep rebound observed in the recovery period following the 48 h-exposure. These results would suggest that the homeostatic regulation of physiological variables may conflict with that of REM sleep occurrence and that the degree of such a contrast is indicated, at low Ta, by the amount of REM sleep in the form of single episodes and, during the following recovery, by the amount of REM sleep in the form of sequential episodes.

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