Total sleep deprivation significantly increased stroke volume and cardiac index, and decreased systemic vascular resistance index, effects that were reversed with recovery sleep.
Does total sleep deprivation alter cardiovascular hemodynamic measures in healthy adults?
Total sleep deprivation induces significant but reversible changes in cardiovascular hemodynamics, highlighting the acute impact of sleep loss on cardiovascular health.
Abstract Since short sleep duration adversely affects cardiovascular (CV) health, we investigated the effects of exposures to total sleep deprivation (TSD), and baseline (BL) and recovery (REC) sleep on CV measures. We conducted a 5‐day experiment at months 2 and 4 in two separate studies (N = 11 healthy adults; 5 females). During these repeated experiments, CV measures stroke volume (SV), cardiac index (CI), systemic vascular resistance index (SVRI), left ventricular ejection time, heart rate (HR), systolic and diastolic blood pressure (SBP and DBP) and mean arterial pressure (MAP) were collected at three assessment time points after: (1) two BL 8 h time‐in‐bed (TIB) sleep opportunity nights; (2) a TSD night; and (3) two REC 8‐10 h TIB nights. CV measures were also collected pre‐study. TSD significantly increased SV and CI, and decreased SVRI, with large effect sizes, which importantly were reversed with recovery, indicating these measures are possible novel biomarkers for assessing the adverse consequences of TSD. Pre‐study SV, CI, SVRI, HR, SBP, and MAP measures also significantly associated with TSD CV responses at months 2 and 4 Pearson's r : 0.615–0.862; r 2 : 0.378–0.743, indicating they are robust correlates of future TSD CV responses. Our novel findings highlight the critical impact of sleep on CV health across time.
Pasetes et al. (Sun,) conducted a other in Healthy adults (n=11). Total sleep deprivation (TSD) vs. Baseline and recovery sleep was evaluated on Cardiovascular measures including stroke volume, cardiac index, and systemic vascular resistance index. Total sleep deprivation significantly increased stroke volume and cardiac index, and decreased systemic vascular resistance index, effects that were reversed with recovery sleep.
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