Sleep medicine
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It is known that the number of arousals per hour of sleep increases linearly across life, while the amount of cyclic alternating pattern (CAP) undergoes a u-shaped evolution. The present study aimed at investigating the differences, overlaps and age-related distribution of arousals and CAP components, i.e. subtypes A1, A2, A3. The relationship between the phase A subtypes and the structural organization of sleep was also evaluated. ⋯ Arousals show only one side of the multi-faceted activation complexes, whereas the three subtypes of CAP provide a graded picture of arousal features from the strongest A3 subtypes, showing a prevalence of EEG desynchrony, to the weakest A1 phases, which are dominated by EEG synchrony and represent the prevalent components of CAP (60% of all the phase A subtypes).