4.3 Article

Cardiorespiratory Interaction and Autonomic Sleep Quality Improve during Sleep in Beds Made from Pinus cembra (Stone Pine) Solid Wood

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/ijerph18189749

Keywords

Pinus cembra; wood; sleep; autonomic nervous system; vagal activity; healing environment

Funding

  1. European Community (Project Interreg III Austria-Italy)
  2. province of Tyrol
  3. Republic of Italy
  4. autonomous province of Bolzano
  5. Joanneum Research GmbH
  6. ZirbenFamilie GmbH, Wattens, Tyrol
  7. Division of Physiology, Otto Loewi Research Center for Vascular Biology, Immunology and Inflammation of the Medical University of Graz

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The study found that sleeping on stone pine beds can improve vagal activity, lower heart rate, and enhance cardiorespiratory interactions, especially during the initial hours of sleep. Subjective assessments of well-being and intrapsychic stability in the morning were significantly better for participants who slept on stone pine beds compared to chipboard beds.
Cardiorespiratory interactions (CRIs) reflect the mutual tuning of two important organismic oscillators-the heartbeat and respiration. These interactions can be used as a powerful tool to characterize the self-organizational and recreational quality of sleep. In this randomized, blinded and cross-over design study, we investigated CRIs in 15 subjects over a total of 253 nights who slept in beds made from different materials. One type of bed, used as control, was made of melamine faced chipboard with a wood-like appearance, while the other type was made of solid wood from stone pine (Pinus cembra). We observed a significant increase of vagal activity (measured by respiratory sinus arrhythmia), a decrease in the heart rate (as an indicator of energy consumption during sleep) and an improvement in CRIs, especially during the first hours of sleep in the stone pine beds as compared to the chipboard beds. Subjective assessments of study participants' well-being in the morning and sub-scalar assessments of their intrapsychic stability were significantly better after they slept in the stone pine bed than after they slept in the chipboard bed. Our observations suggest that CRIs are sensitive to detectable differences in indoor settings that are relevant to human health. Our results are in agreement with those of other studies that have reported that exposure to volatile phytochemical ingredients of stone pine (alpha-pinene, limonene, bornyl acetate) lead to an improvement in vagal activity and studies that show a reduction in stress parameters upon contact with solid wood surfaces.

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