4.3 Article

The sleep of healthy people - A diary study

Journal

CHRONOBIOLOGY INTERNATIONAL
Volume 17, Issue 1, Pages 49-60

Publisher

MARCEL DEKKER INC
DOI: 10.1081/CBI-100101031

Keywords

alertness; diary; healthy; human; sleep debt; wake

Funding

  1. NIA NIH HHS [AG15136, AG13396, AG15138] Funding Source: Medline
  2. NATIONAL INSTITUTE ON AGING [R01AG013396, R01AG015136, R01AG015138] Funding Source: NIH RePORTER

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To provide baseline data for various research studies at the University of Pittsburgh over a 10-year period, 266 healthy subjects (144 male, 122 female, aged 20-50 years) meeting certain criteria each completed a 14-night sleep diary. For each night, the diary allowed the subjective measurement of bedtime, wake time, time in bed (TIB), sleep efficiency, number of minutes of wake after sleep onset (WASO), alertness on awakening, and percentage of mornings needing an alarm (or a person functioning as one). Weeknight versus weekend night differences in TIE (TIBdiff), weekday alertness, and reliance on alarms were examined as possible indicators of sleep debt. In addition, general descriptive data were tabulated. On average, bedtimes were at 23:48 and wake times at 07:23, yielding a mean TIE of 7 hours 35 minutes. As expected, bedtimes and wake times were later on weekend nights than on weeknights. Bedtimes were 26 minutes later, wake times 53 minutes later, yielding a mean weekend TIE increase of 27 minutes. Overall, subjects perceived their sleep latency to be 10.5 minutes, reported an average of one awakening during the night (with an average of 6.4 minutes of WASO), had a diary sleep efficiency of 96.3%, and awoke with an alertness rating of 69.5%. These variables differed little between weeknight and weekend nights. Subjects used an alarm (or a person functioning as an alarm) on 60.9% nights overall, 68.3% on weeknights, 42.5% on weekends. When TIBdiff was used as an estimate of sleep debt (comparing subjects with TIBdiff > 75 minutes with those with a TIBdiff < 30 minutes), the group with more catch-up sleep on weekends had shorter weeknight TIE durations (by about 24 minutes) and relied more on an alarm for weekday waking (by about 22%), indicating the possible utility of these variables as sleep debt indices.

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