Encyclopedia of Sleep and Circadian Rhythms 2023
DOI: 10.1016/b978-0-12-822963-7.00005-0
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Acute sleep deprivation in humans

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Cited by 2 publications
(4 citation statements)
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“…Chronic sleep deprivation is an important public health concern associated with many adverse health outcomes and clinical disorders such as anxiety, depression, immune dysfunction, Alzheimer’s disease, cardiovascular disease, obesity, cancer, and overall morbidity and mortality ( Ferrie et al, 2007 ; Gallicchio and Kalesan, 2009 ; Mullington et al, 2009 ; Phan and Malkani, 2019 ; Al-Rashed et al, 2021 ). Sleep deprivation is a potent stressor generally resulting in marked increases in physiological sleepiness (e.g., the Maintenance of Wakefulness Test and the Multiple Sleep Latency Test) and subjective sleepiness [e.g., the Karolinska Sleepiness Scale (KSS)] and significant deficits in cognitive performance ( Banks and Dinges, 2007 ; Goel et al, 2009 ; Casale et al, 2021a , b ; Yamazaki et al, 2021a , b ). However, a number of studies show there are robust and highly replicable phenotypic individual differences in response to repeated exposure to sleep deprivation: some individuals are resilient, and others are vulnerable to total sleep deprivation (TSD) and chronic sleep restriction (SR), both commonly experienced types of sleep loss ( Van Dongen et al, 2004 ; Goel et al, 2009 ; Dennis et al, 2017 ; Yamazaki and Goel, 2020 ).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Chronic sleep deprivation is an important public health concern associated with many adverse health outcomes and clinical disorders such as anxiety, depression, immune dysfunction, Alzheimer’s disease, cardiovascular disease, obesity, cancer, and overall morbidity and mortality ( Ferrie et al, 2007 ; Gallicchio and Kalesan, 2009 ; Mullington et al, 2009 ; Phan and Malkani, 2019 ; Al-Rashed et al, 2021 ). Sleep deprivation is a potent stressor generally resulting in marked increases in physiological sleepiness (e.g., the Maintenance of Wakefulness Test and the Multiple Sleep Latency Test) and subjective sleepiness [e.g., the Karolinska Sleepiness Scale (KSS)] and significant deficits in cognitive performance ( Banks and Dinges, 2007 ; Goel et al, 2009 ; Casale et al, 2021a , b ; Yamazaki et al, 2021a , b ). However, a number of studies show there are robust and highly replicable phenotypic individual differences in response to repeated exposure to sleep deprivation: some individuals are resilient, and others are vulnerable to total sleep deprivation (TSD) and chronic sleep restriction (SR), both commonly experienced types of sleep loss ( Van Dongen et al, 2004 ; Goel et al, 2009 ; Dennis et al, 2017 ; Yamazaki and Goel, 2020 ).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Notably, there have been no other studies that have investigated the effects of REC sleep on CV indices following TSD. Beyond CV measures, numerous studies have shown that REC sleep after TSD reduced fatigue and sleep propensity, improved neurobehavioral performance, enhanced mood, and returned C‐reactive protein, delta power, and brain age to BL levels (Casale et al., 2023 ; Casale & Goel, 2021 ; Chu et al., 2023 ; Drummond et al., 2006 ; Goldschmied et al., 2023 ; Mantua et al., 2020 ; Stroemel‐Scheder et al., 2020 ; Yamazaki, Antler, Casale, et al., 2021 ; Yamazaki, Antler, Lasek, & Goel, 2021 ). In contrast, REC sleep did not completely reverse the detrimental effects of sleep deprivation on cortisol levels, behavioral attention, and self‐rated vigor levels (Casale et al., 2023 ; Casale & Goel, 2021 ; Yamazaki, Antler, Casale, et al., 2021 ; Yamazaki, Antler, Lasek, & Goel, 2021 ).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Beyond CV measures, numerous studies have shown that REC sleep after TSD reduced fatigue and sleep propensity, improved neurobehavioral performance, enhanced mood, and returned C‐reactive protein, delta power, and brain age to BL levels (Casale et al., 2023 ; Casale & Goel, 2021 ; Chu et al., 2023 ; Drummond et al., 2006 ; Goldschmied et al., 2023 ; Mantua et al., 2020 ; Stroemel‐Scheder et al., 2020 ; Yamazaki, Antler, Casale, et al., 2021 ; Yamazaki, Antler, Lasek, & Goel, 2021 ). In contrast, REC sleep did not completely reverse the detrimental effects of sleep deprivation on cortisol levels, behavioral attention, and self‐rated vigor levels (Casale et al., 2023 ; Casale & Goel, 2021 ; Yamazaki, Antler, Casale, et al., 2021 ; Yamazaki, Antler, Lasek, & Goel, 2021 ). Discrepancies in how effectively REC sleep restores functions to BL levels may be due to the number of REC sleep days employed, variations in the amount of TIB utilized for REC sleep, or interindividual differences, since differential vulnerability to TSD can affect the amount of REC sleep needed for some facets of functioning to return to BL levels (Casale et al., 2023 ; Casale & Goel, 2021 ; Yamazaki, Antler, Lasek, & Goel, 2021 ).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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