Newswise, November 2, 2015 — A study led by Johns Hopkins
Medicine researchers suggests that awakening several times throughout the night
is more detrimental to people’s positive moods than getting the same shortened
amount of sleep without interruption.
As they report in the November 1 issue of the journal Sleep,
researchers studied 62 healthy men and women randomly subjected to three sleep
experimental conditions in an inpatient clinical research suite: three
consecutive nights of either forced awakenings, delayed bedtimes or
uninterrupted sleep.
Participants subjected to eight forced awakenings and those
with delayed bedtimes showed similar low positive mood and high negative mood
after the first night, as measured by a standard mood assessment questionnaire
administered before bedtimes. Participants were asked to rate how strongly they
felt a variety of positive and negative emotions, such as cheerfulness or
anger.
But the researchers say significant differences emerged after
the second night: The forced awakening group had a reduction of 31 percent in
positive mood, while the delayed bedtime group had a decline of 12 percent
compared to the first day.
Researchers add they did not find significant differences in
negative mood between the two groups on any of the three days, which suggests
that sleep fragmentation is especially detrimental to positive mood.
“When your sleep is disrupted throughout the night, you don’t
have the opportunity to progress through the sleep stages to get the amount of
slow-wave sleep that is key to the feeling of restoration,” says study lead
author Patrick Finan, Ph.D., an assistant professor of psychiatry
and behavioral sciences at the Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine.
Although the study was conducted on healthy subjects with
generally normal sleep experiences, Finan says the results are likely to apply
to those who suffer from insomnia.
Frequent awakenings throughout the night are common among new
parents and on-call health care workers, he says. It is also one of the most
common symptoms among people with insomnia, who make up an estimated 10 percent
of the U.S. adult population.
“Many individuals with insomnia achieve sleep in fits and
starts throughout the night, and they don’t have the experience of restorative
sleep,” Finan says.
Depressed mood is a common symptom of insomnia, Finan says,
but the biological reasons for this are poorly understood. To investigate the
link, he and his team used a test called polysomnography to monitor certain
brain and body functions while subjects were sleeping to assess sleep stages.
Compared with the delayed bedtime group, the forced awakening
group had shorter periods of deep, slow-wave sleep. The lack of sufficient
slow-wave sleep had a statistically significant association with the subjects’
reduction in positive mood, the researchers say.
They also found that interrupted sleep affected different
domains of positive mood; it reduced not only energy levels, but also feelings
of sympathy and friendliness.
Finan says the study also suggests that the effects of
interrupted sleep on positive mood can be cumulative, since the group
differences emerged after the second night and continued the day after the
third night of the study.
“You can imagine the hard time people with chronic sleep
disorders have after repeatedly not reaching deep sleep,” Finan says. However,
he says, further studies are needed to learn more about sleep stages in people
with insomnia and the role played by a night of recovering sleep.
Other authors of the study are Phillip J. Quartana of the
Center for Military Psychiatry and Neuroscience, Walter Reed Army Institute of
Research; and Michael T. Smith of the Johns Hopkins University School of
Medicine, who was the principal investigator of the study.
This research was supported by grants from the National
Institute on Drug Abuse (grant number K23 DA035915), the National Institute of
Nursing Research (grant number P30 NR014131), and the National Institute of
Neurological Disorders and Stroke (grant numbers R21 NS051771 and K23 NS47168).
No comments:
Post a Comment