| Literature DB >> 30469495 |
Charles S H Robinson1,2, Natalie B Bryant3, Joshua W Maxwell4, Aaron P Jones5, Bradley Robert6, Melanie Lamphere7, Angela Combs8, Hussein M Al Azzawi9, Benjamin C Gibson10, Joseph L Sanguinetti11, Nicholas A Ketz12, Praveen K Pilly13, Vincent P Clark14,15.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Poor sleep quality is a common complaint, affecting over one third of people in the United States. While sleep quality is thought to be related to slow-wave sleep (SWS), there has been little investigation to address whether modulating slow-wave oscillations (SWOs) that characterize SWS could impact sleep quality. Here we examined whether closed-loop transcranial alternating current stimulation (CL-tACS) applied during sleep impacts sleep quality and efficiency.Entities:
Keywords: Karolinska Sleep Diary; closed-loop; electroencephalogram; sleep efficiency; slow-wave sleep; tACS
Year: 2018 PMID: 30469495 PMCID: PMC6316321 DOI: 10.3390/brainsci8120204
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Brain Sci ISSN: 2076-3425
Figure 1Shows the within-subjects contrast of sleep at home before coming to the laboratory (purple), adaptation night 1 (orange) and verum (red bar) vs. control (blue bar) stimulation collapsed across nights 2 and 3 on subjective sleep quality, n = 19. Error bars represent +/- 1 standard error of the mean. Results of individual, uncorrected t-tests are shown at the top. An asterisk “*” indicates a significant difference (p < 0.05). The omnibus multivariate F was significant at p = 0.021. The within-subjects’ F was significant at p = 0.04. Subjective ratings of sleep quality on the Karolinska Sleep Diary indicate comparable sleep quality on the verum night as during pre-laboratory (home) sleep and significantly greater sleep quality on verum nights compared to adaptation or control nights.
Figure 2Shows the repeated measures effects adaptation night 1 (orange) and verum (red bar) vs. control (blue bar) stimulation collapsed across nights 2 and 3 on sleep efficiency, n = 14. Results of individual, uncorrected t-tests are shown at the top. An asterisk “*” indicates a significant difference (p < 0.05). The omnibus within-subjects’ F was significant at p = 0.038. Error bars represent +/- 1 standard error of the mean. Sleep efficiency variables only exist for nights of in-laboratory sleep, so no “Pre-Lab Sleep” measure could be obtained. Sleep efficiency for verum night was significantly greater than that for the adaptation night.
Figure 3Shows the repeated measures effects of sleep quality while accounting for counterbalancing of stimulation condition order. The omnibus multivariate F was significant at p = 0.042. Error bars represent +/- 1 standard error of the mean. Significant differences were found between the verum and control nights only for the group receiving verum stimulation on Night 2 (namely, the Verum/Control V/C group), with a double asterisk “**” indicating p = 0.005 for an individual, uncorrected t-test.
Figure 4Shows the repeated measures effects of sleep efficiency while accounting for the counterbalancing of stimulation condition order. Error bars represent +/- 1 standard error of the mean. Results of individual, uncorrected t-tests are shown at the top. An asterisk “*” indicates a significant difference (p < 0.05). The omnibus multivariate F was significant at p = 0.044. The within-subjects’ F was significant at p = 0.049. Sleep efficiency shows the highest scores on each group’s verum night with a trend for the V/C group’s verum night vs. adaptation night and a significant effect for the Control/Verum C/V group’s verum night vs. adaptation night.
Mean Values on Sleep Quality, Sleep Efficiency, N1, N2, Slow-Wave and, REM Sleep Time for Each Group Per Each Night of In-Laboratory Sleep.
| V/C on Night 1 Mean (SD)-Adaptation Night | C/V on Night 1 Mean (SD)-Adaptation Night | V/C on Night 2 Mean (SD)-Verum Night | C/V on Night 2 Mean (SD)-Control Night | V/C on Night 3 Mean (SD)-Control Night | C/V on Night 3 Mean (SD)-Verum Night | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Subjective Sleep Quality | 3.4 (0.53) | 3.27 (1.05) | 3.83 (0.53) | 3.5 (0.95) | 3.29 (0.38) | 3.53 (0.98) |
| Sleep Efficiency (%) | 81 (12) | 82 (9) | 89 (11) | 84 (12) | 89 (10) | 92 (2) |
| N1 Sleep Time (min) | 23.94 (11.50) | 19.33 (6.94) | 16.31 (8.24) | 19.42 (8.77) | 26.31 (14.44) | 18.58 (9.44) |
| N2 Sleep Time (min) | 219.81 (73.40) | 279.00 (60.95) | 241.13 (72.56) | 242.17 (77.78) | 254.13 (74.50) | 274.75 (32.63) |
| SWS Sleep Time (min) | 72.81 (38.57) | 76.75 (13.22) | 70.63 (30.80) | 90.17 (35.45) | 77.06 (29.27) | 98.50 (8.29) |
| REM Sleep Time (min) | 53.31 (19.71) | 55.50 (20.39) | 64.31 (34.48) | 47.33 (23.46) | 49.63 (22.66) | 59.75 (23.60) |
| Total Sleep Time (min) | 369.88 (89.65) | 368.08 (59.56) | 392.38 (92.12) | 399.08 (108.94) | 407.13 (81.78) | 451.58 (45.10) |
Values of sleep time for the stages are in minutes, sleep efficiency is scored as a percentage, and subjective sleep quality ranges from a minimum score of 1 to a maximum score of 5, with 5 being the best. SWS; slow-wave sleep; REM: rapid eye movement; V/C: Verum/Control; C/V: Control/ Verum.