| Literature DB >> 32909185 |
Nikolaus C Netzer1,2,3,4, Linda K Rausch5, Hannes Gatterer6, Martin Burtscher5, Arn H Eliasson7, Stephan Pramsohler8.
Abstract
PURPOSE: Severely fractured sleep is mostly portrayed negatively, but investigations in extreme sports show that humans can maintain performance with a minimum of sleep. With two cases of long-lasting extreme sports performances, we demonstrate that severely fragmented sleep does not necessarily lead to a deterioration of physical and cognitive performance.Entities:
Keywords: Bicycling; Extreme sleep fragmentation; Polysomnography; Skiing; Sleep diary
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32909185 PMCID: PMC8195888 DOI: 10.1007/s11325-020-02172-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sleep Breath ISSN: 1520-9512 Impact factor: 2.816
Fig. 1Progression of Sleep Stage Distribution in Marathon Downhill Skiing over the Duration of Twelve Days. Legend: y-axis shows the time of day; x-axis shows the distribution of sleep stages during each day; REM rapid eye movement sleep; N1–N3 = non-REM sleep; N1 = relaxed wakefulness; N2 = light sleep; N3 = deep sleep, slow wave sleep; classification according to the American Academy of Sleep Medicine (AASM)
Fig. 2Distribution of total sleep throughout the course of the Race Across America. Legend: y-axis shows the passages of time during 1 day; x-axis shows each day of the race; pre-/post-race defines the beginning of the race at 04:18 PM (GTM-7) and the finish point at 00:35 AM (GMT-4)
Fig. 3The RAAM (Race Across America) 2015 winner’s team member helping the athlete out of the bicycle saddle and into a comfortable napping position