Five-hour sleep restriction for 7 days increases subjective sleepiness.

We investigated the effects of a 5-h sleep restriction for 7 d on subjective sleepiness in an ambulatory condition by comparing them with baseline conditions consisting of an 8-h sleep for 7 consecutive days. Subjects were 13 healthy male students (mean age 21.1 yr). Each subject was required to get 8 h of sleep (baseline, from 2300 to 0700) for 7 d, and 5 h of sleep (sleep restriction, from 0100 to 0600) for 7 d in an ambulatory condition. The order of the two sleep schedules was randomly assigned. Subjective sleepiness was assessed by a Visual Analog Scale (VAS) every 3 h at 0900, 1200, 1500, 1800, and 2100 for 7 successive days during each sleep schedule. The VAS score during sleep restriction gradually increased up to the 5th day and then reached a plateau. The patterns of time-course changes in the VAS score were similar to those at baseline. The VAS scores showed a peak at 0900, taking a dip at 1200, and then gradually increasing toward 2100. The mean VAS score of the last three days of the 5-h sleep restriction was significantly higher than that at baseline (p<0.001). A 5-h sleep restriction for 7 d in an ambulatory condition increased subjective sleepiness up to the 5th day and then reached a plateau. The patterns of the time-course changes in sleepiness of 5-h sleep restriction per day did not differ from that at baseline.

[1]  D. A. Dukelow,et al.  Industrial Health , 1960, Nature.

[2]  W. B. Webb,et al.  The effects of a chronic limitation of sleep length. , 1974, Psychophysiology.

[3]  Keith O. Noles,et al.  Instructional Control of Sleep Reduction , 1976, Perceptual and motor skills.

[4]  R Broughton,et al.  Sensitivity of the stanford sleepiness scale to the effects of cumulative partial sleep deprivation and recovery oversleeping. , 1981, Sleep.

[5]  M. Carskadon,et al.  Cumulative effects of sleep restriction on daytime sleepiness. , 1981, Psychophysiology.

[6]  M. Koslowsky,et al.  Meta-analysis of the relationship between total sleep deprivation and performance. , 1992, Chronobiology international.

[7]  T. Roth,et al.  Level of sleepiness and total sleep time following various time in bed conditions. , 1993, Sleep.

[8]  G. Kecklund,et al.  Relations between performance and subjective ratings of sleepiness during a night awake. , 1994, Sleep.

[9]  J. Horne,et al.  The effects of chronic sleep reduction on the performance of cognitive tasks sensitive to sleep deprivation , 1995 .

[10]  T. Åkerstedt,et al.  Validation of the S and C components of the three-process model of alertness regulation. , 1995, Sleep.

[11]  J. Pilcher,et al.  Effects of sleep deprivation on performance: a meta-analysis. , 1996, Sleep.

[12]  A. Pack,et al.  Cumulative sleepiness, mood disturbance, and psychomotor vigilance performance decrements during a week of sleep restricted to 4-5 hours per night. , 1997, Sleep.

[13]  M. Bertini,et al.  Assessing vigilance through a brief pencil and paper letter cancellation task (LCT): effects of one night of sleep deprivation and of the time of day. , 1997, Ergonomics.

[14]  J. Horne,et al.  Vehicle accidents related to sleep: a review. , 1999, Occupational and environmental medicine.

[15]  J. Gerven,et al.  The sensitivity of pharmacodynamic tests for the central nervous system effects of drugs on the effects of sleep deprivation , 1999, Journal of psychopharmacology.

[16]  C. Lamm,et al.  Excessive daytime sleepiness in patients suffering from different levels of obstructive sleep apnoea syndrome , 2000, Journal of sleep research.

[17]  R Norton,et al.  The role of driver sleepiness in car crashes: a systematic review of epidemiological studies. , 2001, Accident; analysis and prevention.

[18]  C. Drake,et al.  Effects of rapid versus slow accumulation of eight hours of sleep loss. , 2001, Psychophysiology.

[19]  M. Ferrara,et al.  How much sleep do we need? , 2001, Sleep medicine reviews.

[20]  D. Dinges,et al.  The cumulative cost of additional wakefulness: dose-response effects on neurobehavioral functions and sleep physiology from chronic sleep restriction and total sleep deprivation. , 2003, Sleep.

[21]  J. Pilcher,et al.  Assessing Subjective Daytime Sleepiness: An Internal State Versus Behavior Approach , 2003, Behavioral medicine.

[22]  Jane C Stutts,et al.  Driver risk factors for sleep-related crashes. , 2003, Accident; analysis and prevention.

[23]  A. Spielman,et al.  A standard procedure enhances the correlation between subjective and objective measures of sleepiness. , 2004, Sleep.

[24]  F. Kobayashi,et al.  Job Stress and Stroke and Coronary Heart Disease , 2004 .

[25]  H. Schulz,et al.  Daytime variation in performance and tiredness/sleepiness ratings in patients with insomnia, narcolepsy, sleep apnea and normal controls , 2004, Journal of sleep research.

[26]  P. Philip Sleepiness of occupational drivers. , 2005, Industrial health.