4.6 Article

Sleep deprivation reduces vagal tone during an inspiratory endurance task in humans

Journal

SLEEP
Volume 44, Issue 10, Pages -

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS INC
DOI: 10.1093/sleep/zsab105

Keywords

sleep deprivation; inspiratory loading; endurance; cardiac autonomic nervous system; heart rate variability

Funding

  1. CHU de Poitiers
  2. Region Nouvelle-Aquitaine
  3. ISIS Atlantique

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Sleep deprivation impairs vagal tone adaptation during inspiratory effort in healthy individuals, decreasing inspiratory endurance. The lack of vagal tonal response to inspiratory load under sleep deprivation results in higher heart rate and reduced inspiratory endurance during the trial.
Study Objectives: Sleep deprivation alters inspiratory endurance by reducing inspiratory motor output. Vagal tone is involved in exercise endurance. This study aimed to investigate the effect of sleep deprivation on vagal tone adaptation in healthy subjects performing an inspiratory effort. Methods: Vagal tone was assessed using Heart Rate Variability normalized units of frequency domain component HF (high frequency) before, at the start, and the end of an inspiratory loading trial performed until exhaustion by 16 volunteers after one night of sleep deprivation and one night of normal sleep, where sleep deprivation reduced the inspiratory endurance by half compared to the normal sleep condition (30 min vs 60 min). Results: At rest, heart rate was similar in sleep deprivation and normal sleep conditions. In normal sleep condition, heart rate increased during inspiratory loading task; this increase was greater in sleep deprivation condition. In normal sleep condition, vagal tone increased at the beginning of the trial.This vagal tone increase was absent in sleep deprivation condition. Conclusions: Sleep deprivation abolished vagal tone response to inspiratory load, possibly contributing to a higher heart rate during the trial and to a reduced inspiratory endurance.

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