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Does sleep promote adaptation to acute stress: An experimental study

Emil Hein, Risto Halonen, Thomas Wolbers, Tommi Makkonen, Markus Kyllönen, Liisa Kuula, Ilmari Kurki, Philipp Stepnicka, Anu‐Katriina Pesonen

2024Neurobiology of Stress10 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Objectives: Evidence of the impact of chronic stress on sleep is abundant, yet experimental sleep studies with a focus on acute stress are scarce and the results are mixed. Our study aimed to fill this gap by experimentally investigating the effects of pre-sleep social stress on sleep dynamics during the subsequent night, as measured with polysomnography (PSG). Methods: = 25.76 years SD = 3.35) underwent a stress-inducing (SC) or neutral control condition (CC) in virtual reality (VR). We used overnight EEG measurements to analyze the basic sleep parameters and power spectral density (PSD) across the sleep cycles, and measured heart rate and its variability (HRV), skin electrodermal activity (EDA), and salivary cortisol to capture physiological arousal during the VR task and the pre-sleep period. Results: Following acute stress (SC), the amount of slow-wave sleep (SWS) was higher and N2 sleep lower relative to CC, specifically in the first sleep cycle. In SC, PSD was elevated in the beta-low (16-24 Hz) and beta-high (25-35 Hz) frequency ranges during both stages N2 and SWS over the entire night. Conclusions: Sleep promoted adaptation to acute social stress by a longer duration of SWS in the subsequent sleep period, especially in early sleep. A similar homeostatic effect towards restorative sleep is well-evidenced in animal model stress studies but has not been previously reported in experimental human studies. Whether the high-frequency PSD activity during stages N2 and SWS also serves in the resolution of transient stress, remains open.

Topics & Concepts

Sleep (system call)PolysomnographyArousalAudiologySlow-wave sleepHeart rate variabilityPsychologyNon-rapid eye movement sleepSleep StagesSleep deprivationMedicineHeart rateInternal medicineCircadian rhythmElectroencephalographyNeuroscienceBlood pressureComputer scienceOperating systemSleep and Wakefulness ResearchSleep and related disordersSleep and Work-Related Fatigue
Does sleep promote adaptation to acute stress: An experimental study | Litcius