Journal of clinical psychopharmacology
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J Clin Psychopharmacol · Feb 2003
Randomized Controlled Trial Clinical TrialImprovement of sleep and pituitary-adrenal inhibition after subchronic intranasal vasopressin treatment in elderly humans.
Subchronic intranasal treatment with argininevasopressin (AVP) has been shown to exert a strong ameliorating effect on sleep and slow wave sleep (SWS) deficits in elderly. However, AVP is also a potent stimulus of the pituitary-adrenal stress system, which is usually inhibited during early, SWS-rich sleep. A disinhibition of pituitary-adrenal activity during sleep is correlated with aging and is considered a pathologic factor contributing to various age-related diseases. ⋯ Notably, rather than increasing pituitary-adrenal activity, AVP decreased the early sleep cortisol nadir on average by 0.5 microg/dl (p<0.05). AVP did not induce any measurable changes in fluid balance or cardiovascular activity. Overall, results indicate a promoting effect of AVP on SWS in aged accompanied by a beneficial rather than impairing influence on the neuroendocrine pattern of sleep.