par Stenuit, Patricia ;Kerkhofs, Myriam
Référence Sleep, 28, 10, page (1283-1288)
Publication Publié, 2005-10
Article révisé par les pairs
Résumé : Study Objectives: To investigate how age influences the effects of 3 nights of sleep restriction in healthy women. Design: After a baseline night, sleep was restricted to 4 hours during 3 consecutive nights. One recovery night followed the sleep restriction. Setting: The sleep-restriction experiments were conducted under standardized conditions with continuous electroencephalographic ambulatory recordings. Before entering the study, the subjects underwent a polysomnographic recording for exclusion of sleep disorder and adaptation to the laboratory environment. Participants: Eleven young women (aged 20-30 years) and 10 older women (aged 55-65 years) were included in the study. Intervention: The subjects were admitted to the sleep laboratory for 5 consecutive nights and days. After 1 baseline night, 3 nights of sleep restriction to 4 hours were performed and were followed by 1 recovery night of 8 hours. Continuous ambulatory electroencephalographic recordings were performed, as well as the Maintenance of Wakefulness Test (8:30 AM and 1:30 PM), the Stanford Sleepiness Scale, and the Psychomotor Vigilance Test. Results: Young women were more affected by sleep restriction than were the older women. This was evidenced by more sleep onsets during the Maintenance of Wakefulness Test sessions in the young subjects, who also rated themselves more sleepy than the older women. Conclusions: Age influences the impact of sleep restriction on vigilance in women.