4.2 Article

Subjective Well-Being Is Modulated by Circadian Phase, Sleep Pressure, Age, and Gender

期刊

JOURNAL OF BIOLOGICAL RHYTHMS
卷 24, 期 3, 页码 232-242

出版社

SAGE PUBLICATIONS INC
DOI: 10.1177/0748730409335546

关键词

mood; constant routine; sleep deprivation; sleepiness; melatonin; cortisol; sleep-wake homeostat; circadian rhythm

资金

  1. Swiss National Science Foundation [3100-055385.98, 3130-0544991.98, 320000-108108]
  2. Velux Foundation (Switzerland)
  3. Buhlmann Laboratories, Allschwil (Switzerland)

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Subjective well-being largely depends on mood, which shows circadian rhythmicity and can be linked to rhythms in many physiological circadian markers, such as melatonin and cortisol. In healthy young volunteers mood is influenced by an interaction of circadian phase and the duration of time awake. The authors analyzed this interaction under differential sleep pressure conditions to investigate age and gender effects on subjective well-being. Sixteen healthy young (8 women, 8 men; 20-35 years) and 16 older volunteers (8 women, 8 men; 55-75 years) underwent a 40-h sleep deprivation (high sleep pressure) and a 40-h nap protocol (low sleep pressure) in a balanced crossover design under constant routine conditions. Mood, tension, and physical comfort were assessed by visual analogue scales during scheduled wakefulness, and their average formed a composite score of well-being. Significant variations in wellbeing were determined by the factors age, sleep pressure, and circadian phase. Well-being was generally worse under high than low sleep pressure. Older volunteers felt significantly worse than the young under both experimental conditions. Significant interactions were found between sleep pressure and age, and between sleep pressure and gender. This indicated that older volunteers and women responded with a greater impairment in wellbeing under high compared with low sleep pressure. The time course of wellbeing displayed a significant circadian modulation, particularly in women under high sleep pressure conditions. The results demonstrate age-and/or gender-related modifications of well-being related to sleep deprivation and circadian phase and thus point to specific biological components of mood vulnerability.

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