日常睡眠倾向模式背后的内在平衡力量。

Vasili Kharchenko, Michael Rozman, Arcady A Putilov, Irina V Zhdanova
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引用次数: 0

摘要

不断增加的睡眠需求和波动的入睡能力之间的不匹配是失眠——最常见的睡眠障碍——的根本原因,但人们对这种不匹配仍然知之甚少。虽然睡眠需求随着清醒时间的增加而稳步增加,但睡眠倾向——从清醒过渡到睡眠的可能性——遵循一个双峰模式,在下午三点左右达到顶峰,在晚上下降,在接近就寝时间时再次上升。在我们之前开发的睡眠动态波模型的基础上,我们将这个内稳态框架扩展到清醒时期,并表明它预测了观察到的双峰睡眠倾向曲线。这种模式是由两个相互作用的因素产生的:清醒状态的不稳定性,在一天中呈指数增长,状态之间的相互作用强度,遵循双相轨迹。总之,他们得出了与实验数据密切相关的睡眠倾向的每日概况。值得注意的是,经验曲线显示了比模型单独预测的更深的夜间下降-反映了已知的睡眠倾向的昼夜节律调节。该模型表明,午后峰值反映了在稳态平衡阈值下最大的相互作用,而晚上的下降是由于睡眠和觉醒状态之间最小的耦合,抵消了高度的不稳定性。这两个因素在晚些时候都上升,有利于就寝时间及以后的睡眠。睡眠剥夺的实验数据进一步支持了这些预测。这项工作为理解日常睡眠倾向提供了机制基础,并可能为改善健康和疾病中的睡眠和表现提供策略。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

Homeostatic forces underlying the daily pattern of sleep propensity.

Homeostatic forces underlying the daily pattern of sleep propensity.

Homeostatic forces underlying the daily pattern of sleep propensity.

Homeostatic forces underlying the daily pattern of sleep propensity.

The mismatch between rising sleep need and the fluctuating ability to fall asleep underlies insomnia-the most common sleep disorder-yet remains poorly understood. While sleep need increases steadily with time awake, sleep propensity-the likelihood of transitioning from wake to sleep-follows a bimodal pattern, peaking in the mid-afternoon, dipping in the evening, and rising again near bedtime. Building on our previously developed wave model of sleep dynamics, we extend this homeostatic framework to the waking period and show that it predicts the observed bimodal sleep propensity curve. This pattern emerges from two interacting factors: wake-state instability, which increases exponentially across the day, and interaction strength between states, which follows a biphasic trajectory. Together, they produce a daily profile of sleep propensity that closely aligns with experimental data. Notably, the empirical curve demonstrates a deeper evening dip than the model alone predicts-reflecting the known circadian modulation of sleep propensity. The model reveals that the mid-afternoon peak reflects maximal interaction at the homeostatic equilibrium threshold, while the evening dip results from minimal coupling between sleep and wake states, counteracting high instability. A late-day rise in both factors facilitates sleep onset at bedtime and beyond. Experimental data from sleep deprivation further support these predictions. This work provides a mechanistic foundation for understanding daily sleep propensity and may inform strategies to improve sleep and performance in both health and disease.

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