Effects of partial sleep deprivation on slow waves during non-rapid eye movement sleep: a high density EEG investigation

DT Plante, MR Goldstein, JD Cook, R Smith… - Clinical …, 2016 - Elsevier
DT Plante, MR Goldstein, JD Cook, R Smith, BA Riedner, ME Rumble, L Jelenchick, A Roth…
Clinical Neurophysiology, 2016Elsevier
Objective Changes in slow waves during non-rapid eye movement (NREM) sleep in
response to acute total sleep deprivation are well-established measures of sleep
homeostasis. This investigation utilized high-density electroencephalography (hdEEG) to
examine topographic changes in slow waves during repeated partial sleep deprivation.
Methods Twenty-four participants underwent a 6-day sleep restriction protocol. Spectral and
period-amplitude analyses of sleep hdEEG data were used to examine changes in slow …
Objective
Changes in slow waves during non-rapid eye movement (NREM) sleep in response to acute total sleep deprivation are well-established measures of sleep homeostasis. This investigation utilized high-density electroencephalography (hdEEG) to examine topographic changes in slow waves during repeated partial sleep deprivation.
Methods
Twenty-four participants underwent a 6-day sleep restriction protocol. Spectral and period-amplitude analyses of sleep hdEEG data were used to examine changes in slow wave energy, count, amplitude, and slope relative to baseline.
Results
Changes in slow wave energy were dependent on the quantity of NREM sleep utilized for analysis, with widespread increases during sleep restriction and recovery when comparing data from the first portion of the sleep period, but restricted to recovery sleep if the entire sleep episode was considered. Period-amplitude analysis was less dependent on the quantity of NREM sleep utilized, and demonstrated topographic changes in the count, amplitude, and distribution of slow waves, with frontal increases in slow wave amplitude, numbers of high-amplitude waves, and amplitude/slopes of low amplitude waves resulting from partial sleep deprivation.
Conclusions
Topographic changes in slow waves occur across the course of partial sleep restriction and recovery.
Significance
These results demonstrate a homeostatic response to partial sleep loss in humans.
Elsevier