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Swiss medical weekly · May 1998
Arousal responses to inspiratory resistive loading during REM and non-REM sleep in normal men after short-term fragmentation/deprivation.
- M Gugger, U Keller, and J Mathis.
- Department of Medicine, University of Berne Inselspital, Berne. mgugger@insel.ch
- Swiss Med Wkly. 1998 May 2;128(18):696-702.
AbstractThe arousal response to inspiratory resistive loading in normal men is known to be high during REM sleep compared to non-REM sleep. We investigated whether we could observe the same pattern, i.e. brisk arousal from REM sleep compared to non-REM sleep, in normal subjects who had undergone short-term sleep fragmentation/deprivation prior to the investigation. The arousal response to the repeated application of an external inspiratory resistance of 25 cm H2O/l/s was determined during REM and non-REM sleep in 10 healthy men after a single night with 4 hours of acoustically fragmented sleep. The percentage of arousals to non-arousals occurring within 2 minutes of the load application was significantly higher during REM sleep than during either of the non-REM sleep stages 2 and 3/4 and decreased significantly from stage REM to stage 2 and from stage 2 to stage 3/4. The mean time to arousal in REM was significantly shorter than in non-REM stage 3/4. The duration of sleep (comparing the results of the first with the second half of the sleep period time) did not modify the arousal response in stages 2 and 3/4. Despite short-term sleep fragmentation/deprivation the night before the study, the arousal response to external inspiratory resistive loading was brisker during REM than non-REM sleep in the healthy subjects studied. The responses were of the same magnitude as those induced in prior studies without pretest sleep disturbance. This is different from what is seen in patients with sleep apnea, where breathing disorders are worst during REM sleep and sleep fragmentation/deprivation leads to rapid deterioration of arousal responses to the spontaneously occurring airway occlusions.
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