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Acute sleep loss increases CNS health biomarkers and compromises the ability to stay awake in a sex-and weight-specific manner

Authors :
Lieve T. van Egmond
Shervin Bukhari
Andrea Lessa Benedet
Nicholas J. Ashton
Elisa M. S. Meth
Alexander Boukas
Joachim Engström
Maria Ilemosoglou
Kaj Blennow
Henrik Zetterberg
Christian Benedict
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
Uppsala universitet, Institutionen för farmaceutisk biovetenskap, 2022.

Abstract

Night shift work impairs vigilance performance, reduces the ability to stay awake, and compromises brain health. To investigate if the magnitude of these adverse night shift work effects differs between sexes and weight groups, 47 men and women with either normal weight or obesity participated in one night of sleep and one night of total sleep loss. During the night of sleep loss, participants’ subjective sleepiness, vigilance performance, and ability to stay awake during 2-min quiet wake with eyes closed were repeatedly assessed. In addition, blood was collected in the morning after sleep loss and sleep to measure central nervous system (CNS) health biomarkers. Our analysis showed that women were sleepier during the night of sleep loss (P P P P P = 0.001). Finally, no differences in vigilance performance were noted between the sex and weight groups. Our findings suggest that the ability to stay awake during and the CNS health biomarker response to night shift work may differ between sexes and weight groups. Follow-up studies must confirm our findings under more long-term night shift work conditions.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....4297f39d1ece12dd7c272840d58320ed